4 October–13 December 2014
Preview: 3 October, 6–9pm
EcoleNationaleSupérieured’ArtsdeParis-Cergy (ENSAPC)YGREC
20, rue Louise Weiss
75013 Paris
France
Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 1–7pm
www.ensapc.fr/ygrec
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The Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Arts de Paris-Cergy is pleased to announce The Hidden, a solo exhibition by the artist Salvatore Arancio which will take place in its exhibition space YGREC from 4 October until 13 December. This major project constitutes for the artist his first solo exhibition organised by a public institution in France.
It directly follows on from a residency he did at the Récollets in Paris in autumn 2013, where he started to explore the Jardin d’Agronomie Tropical in NogentSurMarne. There, he discovered fascinating archival material dating from the colonial exhibition, which took place in 1907, along with relics of the agronomical experimentations that were led by a group of scientists, particularly the growing of species of plants which led to the mass introduction of exotic florae across French colonies. The colonial exhibitions of 1907 and 1931 were organised to offer visitors an opportunity to take a glimpse into the life of unknown communities (Indochina, Africa, Tunisia), where they could come and observe the autochthons in their respective national pavilions in the middle of recreated “typical” environments. Today some of the original villages are still in place but the buildings, fenced off from visitors, have all almost completely collapsed.
More than the imposing colonial history the garden still holds, the artist firstly became fascinated by the apocalyptic vision naturally fueled by the surrounding landscape, subtly interweaving overgrown nature and uncanny pieces of architecture; in brief, the encounter of the real and the imaginary confined in a physical delimited space, which Foucault would define as “Hétérotopie.”
At YGREC, the public will be given the opportunity to discover a landscape that sits between the imaginary and the real, a symbolic garden reminiscent of utopias and realities. Simultaneously bringing these encounters to a halt, Arancio aims to produce a new body of work in an ambitious installation which will surround the entire space.
Recreating part of the garden and the greenhouses, the artist, in the same way people at the beginning of the 20th century were given the illusion to travel to exotic places, will give the public of today the illusion to enter an environment, which in a time-space dimension has ceased to exist. Using an array of media including Super8 film, ceramics, sculpture and prints, Arancio will directly take inspiration from both his fascination with modern ruins and his investigation in the way French colonialism has subtly influenced and altered the landscape of its colonies.
Born in 1974 in Catania, Italy, Salvatore Arancio graduated with an MA Fine Arts Photography from the Royal College of Art (UK). He grew up in Sicily and has been living and working in London for many years. Recent solo and group exhibitions include Cathedral, AV Festival, Northern Gallery For Contemporary Art, Sunderland, UK, (2014); Curiosity: Art & the Pleasure of Knowing, Hayward Touring, UK (2013); Cyclorama, Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City (2013); Alternating Layers of Contrasting Resistance, Rowing, London, (2013); Solo Project, Art Rotterdam, Rotterdam, (2013); The Little Man of the Forest With the Big Hat, and Federica Schiavo Gallery, Rome (2013). Upcoming shows include a twoman presentation at (Off)icielle, Cité de la Mode et du Design, Paris (22–26 October 2014); Screening of his film Birds in the frame of Cinéphémère, FIAC, Paris (22–26 October 2014); and a show at the Centre d’art contemporain La Halle des bouchers, Vienne, France (May 2015). He is represented by the gallery Federica Schiavo, Rome.
This exhibition receives the generous support from Fluxus Art Projects, FrancoBritish programme for contemporary art, supported by the French Ministry of Culture and Communication, the Institut français and the British Council.
Thanks to Serge Volper, archive curator Cirad, NogentSurMarne; Jardins Ephémères; Federica Schiavo Gallery; The Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris; ENSAPC students who participated in the project.
Exhibition curated by Emeline Vincent.