Tadashi Kawamata — Under the Water

Exhibition

Installation

Tadashi Kawamata
Under the Water

Past: December 10, 2011 → January 28, 2012

Kamel Mennour presents “Under the Water”, Tadashi Kawamata’s second solo exhibition at the gallery.

Made, in part, using reclaimed timber, the Japanese artist Tadashi Kawamata’s works sometimes give the impression of pouring forth like a river bursting its banks. This is true, most notably, for the Gandamaison project at the Maréchalerie art center in Versailles in 2008, for which the artist assembled more than 5000 wooden crates that appear to be tumbling down from the roof of the Jules Hardouin Mansart building.

For his second solo exhibition at galerie kamel mennour, Tadashi Kawamata is putting together a project destined to unsettle.

Walking into the courtyard of no. 47 rue Saint-André des arts, visitors will be startled to see the sky blotted out by a kind of perforated ceiling, made up of pieces of wood put together in anarchic fashion. Throughout their journey around the gallery’s three ground-floor spaces, they will be towered over by this strange and disturbing hanging pergola, which appears to be animated in places by a slight swell.

The artist has already created environments similar in form, one of them being at Munich’s Haus der Kunst in 1998. However, this new Tadashi Kawamata sculpture marks a departure from his previous works due to its dramatic dimension. Affected by the catastrophes that have wreaked havoc in Japan this year, the artist has conceived of his structure as a motionless and deadly wave, in a reference to all those bits of broken wood carried along by the receding tsunami, which saturated the ocean surface with their sheer quantity. These remains of coastal houses and villages, which are faintly reminiscent of votive offerings, are also fragments of broken lives — departed souls destined to roam the edges of the Pacific Ocean forever. Which is why, in this new installation entitled Under the Water, the artist turns the world upside down, so that the surface of the water becomes, very simply, a sky.

Kawamata’s work has been exhibited all over the world, at institutions including the Pompidou Center in Paris, the HKW in Berlin, the Art Tower Mito in Mito, the Serpentine Gallery in London, the Art Pace Foundation for Contemporary Art in San Antonio and the MACBA in Barcelona; it also has featured at numerous biennials, such as that of Venice (1982), documenta VIII and IX (1987-1992), the São Paulo Art Biennal (1987).

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47, rue Saint-André des arts
6, rue du Pont de Lodi

75006 Paris

T. 01 56 24 03 63 — F. 01 40 46 80 20

www.kamelmennour.com

Odéon
Saint-Michel

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 11 AM – 7 PM

The artist