La Forêt Usagère — Une proposition d’Aurélien Mole

Exhibition

Drawing, painting, sculpture

La Forêt Usagère
Une proposition d’Aurélien Mole

Past: May 23 → July 12, 2014

Where does this exhibition title come from ?

The exhibition Working Forest is titled after a discussion with Dominique Blais about the project of Patrick Bernier and Olive Martin whose subject matter revolves around a forest in the southwest region of France, shared acres belonging to several towns.
This forest is divided into many parts, which some inhabitants own more than others. A share does not represent a precise location of the forest, but corresponds with the amount of timber allowed to be collected by the inhabitants of the area. We could think of dead wood as for heating or nobler timber for carving a beam or a sculpture. What I remember from this talk is the fact that this forest is a reservoir of various functions as well as a public space without attributed territories. I think it is also a great source of conflict and a relevant case for those willing to study law.

Nothing allegoric about this title then ?

Yes, indeed the display will surely be very foresty ! (Laughs)
We must understand this with respect to another allegory : a display that might be a French garden.

Why such an exhibition today ?

The year I made a serious decision to state clear my artistic practice, I sought to construct its conditions of possibility. In the same way, I started studying art history before going to a Beaux-Arts (fine arts) school and finishing the degree with training for professional curatorship. In any case, I tried to determine an order in which to do things. If projects are well organised, we could imagine that such sequence is carried out following this smooth logic that has a regressive beauty of domino-like path, where one only has to push the first one once everything else is put in place. The advantage of the logic is its obstinacy.

Is your practice based on this kind of logic ?

The sort of economy I put in place is based largely on the photography of views of exhibitions. Therefore I buy myself a certain kind of independence as I photograph works of other artists. Photographing of exhibitions is not something terribly technical but very demanding in terms of interpretation. If the quality of studio photographer relies on reading materials, fashion photographer on reading attitudes, architecture photographer on translating volumes, reporter on choosing a side, photographer of exhibitions should be able to read artworks and an endless array of discourse that could be articulated. We might here add that reading is a way to make things pass through you. Thus, the multitude of practices I take pictures of are passing through me. If I rely on the comfortable convention of a documentary’s neutrality, nothing will be reflected from these passages in the photos taken for my clients. But this apparent absence of affect is merely a regulated surface that allows for an economy to exist : I obviously do not photograph works of art in the same way as when I’m dealing with canned soup!

So works that you photograph have an influence on you.

This practice of exhibition views, which puts me in touch with different artworks, but takes up part of my time, led me to consider fairly early in my time ‘collaboration’ as a method of production that suits my own situation. This allowed me to know better the artists I was interested in, while working together for a collective project. In such series as Les Objets Incomplets (The Incomplete Things) or les Dessins Bifaces (The Double Face Drawings), rules of the game acts a bit like the basis of collaboration. Again, it is a matter of setting up a frame to organise all productions, as in the exhibition photography. It could be a collected object for its flaws or a collage made from carbon papers. These are objects with a lot of potential, “open artworks” hosting other practices, logics, personalities. Series are also means of knowledge. In the best case, they reveal thoughts inherent in the works of the artists I am interested in. Another advantage is that I earn so much time. The work is still in progress even when I don’t have the time to work on it.

What are the consequences of such approach ?

I said earlier that this economy brings my own independence, which would be in vain if there were not any consequences : firstly being independent in terms of production. Nowadays, the means the artists are offered to actualize ideas are multiple. From residency to association with gallery, from research grant to the exhibition in a wealthy foundation, each possibility requires at the same time its counterpart. Residencies are sometimes left only with space-time without resources, or worse: traps transforming the artist into a entertainer to make profitable its own presence supported by public funds. One remarkable exception of Artistes en Résidence (Artists in Residence), a program by Martial Déflacieux, in Clermont-Ferrand is one of the most beautiful project I was given to try out. Associating itself with a gallery submits the work to market logic. Good galleries will create a buffer zone between the artist and the market, bad ones will encourage the artist to get stuck in the mud of fashion. It is more profitable to recognize than seeking to know. The research grant is a good opportunity but the one who give such grant has to accept the fact the investment could indeed lead to nothing.

Those comments are rather general, but what does this independence concerning you precisely mean ?

The other form of independence is related to not making a living out of your art. I instinctively think it’s a good thing to separate an artistic practice from the inevitable matters of subsistence. At least one should not resolve the issues of the other. I could further argue about this point but I will pass this time. However I would like to thank the visitors of this forest: Åbäke, Jesús Alberto Benitez, Roxane Borujerdi, Nicolas Chardon, Aurélien Froment, Hyppolite Hentgen, Charlie Jeffery, Raphaël Julliard, Pierre Leguillon Christophe Lemaitre, Colombe Marcasiano, Clément Rodzielski, Izet Sheshivari, Olivier Soulerin, SYNDICAT, Julien Tiberi, Eva Taulois, Niels Trannois, Cyril Verde.

Other things to add?

Yes: In this working forest, there might be a lake, also entitled to be used, where one could spend time.

Aurélien Mole
  • Opening Saturday, May 24, 2014 6 PM → 9 PM
03 Le Marais Zoom in 03 Le Marais Zoom out

73-75, rue Quincampoix

75003 Paris

T. 01 42 77 05 97 — F. 01 42 76 94 47

www.galeriedohyanglee.com

Les Halles
Rambuteau

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 2 PM – 7 PM
Other times by appointment

The artists

  • Clément Rodzielski
  • Cyril Verde
  • Pierre Leguillon
  • Nicolas Chardon
  • Aurélien Froment
  • Roxane Borujerdi
  • Jesus Alberto Benitez
  • Åbäke
  • Colombe Marcasiano
  • Charlie Jeffery
And 9 others…