Adrien Missika
Siesta Club

Adrien Missika
Siesta Club

Quartz Studio

Adrien Missika, Siesta Club (Tlatelolco, Mexico DF), 2015. Color photograph. Courtesy of the artist and Quartz Studio.
May 1, 2015

Adrien Missika
Siesta Club

May 4–July 11, 2015

Quartz Studio
Via Giulia di Barolo, 18/D
10124 Turin 
Italy

T +39 338 4290085
F +39 011 8264640
info [​at​] quartzstudio.net

www.quartzstudio.net

On Monday, May 4, at 7pm, Quartz Studio is delighted to present the exhibition Siesta Club, the second solo exhibition in Italy of French artist Adrien Missika (b. Paris, 1981). For this exhibition, he drew on his recent experience in Mexico to conceive a new project, the first in a series of similar installations that he will later also show elsewhere. Siesta Club is a paradox in terms. Missika explains, “The siesta is highly individual by definition, whereas the word ‘club’ suggests something done in a group, as a community. I intend Siesta Club as sharing an experience that is usually quite individual, betwixt waking and sleep, reality and imagination, inspiration and productivity.” For his Turin project, with consideration of the space’s limited size, Missika created a relaxation room, a deliberately humorous version of the cliché of the “siesta,” long associated with many Central and South American cultures. Missika’s Siesta Club in Turin plays with this cliché and reflects on the concept of time which is conferred ever different values depending on the economic, cultural and geographical setting where we live; sometimes we control it compulsively and sometimes, more naturally, we let it flow. Siesta Club turns Quartz’s room into a living space that invites you to stop and kick back, an invitation made through its hammock, a primordial type of bed (said to have been invented in Mexico, incidentally.) The artist explains, “What I like about hammocks is that they are hybrid objects. They are essentially brightly colored synthetic canvases, which means they can be considered paintings, or they could be seen as sculptures or as practical objects for people to rest on.”The hammock is an emblem of relaxation and so, in Missika’s eyes, a place of reflection with no time limit, a dimension that hangs between the physical and mental dimensions, as well as a space, a container. For Missika the hammock represents a way of being in the world, bespeaking a joyful, light-hearted, yet rather philosophical, approach to life. Missika says, “In designing the exhibition at Quartz, I thought of ‘species of spaces’ like in the book of that title that Georges Perec wrote in 1974, in which he describes the bed as the smallest anthropometric space in which a person can rest. The hammock is even more minimal and primitive in that way. Hammocks are also handy for travelers. Such a bed can be brought anywhere you go, offering great freedom. There’s no longer a need to design a house when you can carry your bed and hang it almost anywhere.” 

Missika is an artist-traveler who we could call a contemporary neo-romantic for his ability to force the observer to take on a viewpoint that contains elements belonging to times and geographies near and far at once. Missika’s art comes out of a practice combining technological deftness and manual skill, often having the appeal of the past mixed with the contemporary era. The results may be vital or decadent, reassuring or disquieting, and they always have an element of melancholy. He uses low-resolution videos, pictures taken with very long exposure times, ever-changing print processing methods, sculptures made with reused objects and new materials, images of desolation, and magnetic places paired with soundtracks from artificial ambient noise, specifically designed for each occasion. He never fails to create an effect of fascinating, hypnotic alienation in the observer. Though Missika’s works appear immediately interpretable, they are actually built on layers of multiple historical, anthropological, alchemical, scientific references, plus, and not least, cultural and experiential ones. Driven by his personal vocation for the exotic, he does his research on site, giving him opportunities to assimilate, demolish and reconstruct anew, including through the time factor, the clichés through which each of us unconsciously builds a certain image, often a stereotyped one, of things far from us. 


Adrien Missika (b. 1981, Paris) lives and works in situ. Co-founder of the art space 1m3 in Lausanne in 2006, he graduated from ECAL (Ecole cantonale d’art de Lausanne) in 2007. He has had numerous personal exhibitions including 21er Haus in Vienna (upcoming), Kunsthaus Glarus, in Switzerland, Galerie Edouard Manet, Centre d’art contemporain de Gennevilliers, in France, Centre d’art contemporain de Genève, in Switzerland and Palais de Tokyo in Paris. His work has also been shown in many group exhibitions, among which at Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris; Ellis King, Dubin; Metro Pictures, New York; Pilar Corrias, London; Museo cantonale d’arte, Lugano; Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau; Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, Montecarlo; Le Magasin, Grenoble; Fotomuseum Winterthur and Centre Pompidou, Paris. In 2009 he was awarded the Swiss Art Award, in 2011 the Prize of the Fondation Ricard and the Kiefer Hablitzel Prize. Adrien Missika is represented by the gallery Bugada & Cargnel in Paris. He is currently a resident at the 21er Haus, Vienna.

We would like to thank the artist and the Bugada & Cargnel Gallery in Paris. The exhibition will run from May 4 to July 11, 2015, by appointment.

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