Peter Buggenhout at Galerie Laurent Godin

Peter Buggenhout at Galerie Laurent Godin

Galerie Laurent Godin

Peter  Buggenhout, “Gorgo#13,” 2007.
Mixed media, polyurethane, wood, horsehair, textile, plastic, blood over a core of debris.
301 x 97 x 68 cm.
May 6, 2011


Peter Buggenhout at Galerie Laurent Godin 

14 May–25 June 2011

Vernissage:
Saturday, 14 May, 18–21h

5, rue du grenier Saint-Lazare
75003 Paris, France
T +33 (0)1 42 71 10 66

www.laurentgodin.com

An important topic in the work of Peter Buggenhout is his use of industrial and organic waste to make art.

In the late 1990s, the artist launched into a sculptural practice that is anything but normative. His approach hinges on the materials: dust, horse hair, detritus, blood, and cow stomachs and intestines, that is to say, abject materials which set in motion a constant ambivalence between attraction and repulsion.

These works, whose materials produce an indeterminate and enigmatic form, are related the formless, which, according to Georges Bataille, “is not only an adjective having a given meaning but a term that serves to bring things down in the world.” Peter Buggenhout plays on this declassing so that his work circumvents categorization. He materializes waste to the point of giving it a form before subjecting it to a series of operations that lead to formlessness.

[…]

In this way, he seeks to make sculptures that are concerned with what they are and nothing else. Their autonomy comes precisely from his choice of materials, which, once removed from their original context, lose their form and function because they have been declassed.

Looking at these works, it is difficult to tell how old they are. They do not belong to any time frame, yet they seem paradoxically close to archeological finds from the past or future, pointing to a time that will surpass us. 

For his first solo show at Laurent Godin gallery in Paris, Peter Buggenhout chose to bring together three aspects of his work. His selection of recent works present new formal possibilities (more ethereal, in suspension), all the while maintaining the specificities of his materials (dust, blood, horse hair, cow stomach, etc.). Here, the artist clearly continues to push to an extreme his uncategorizable aesthetic choices, which pay no heed to the trends of the day and never give in to the temptation of the facile, the seductive, and the accessible.


Extract from a text by Valérie Da Costa


News :

- On The Metaphor Of Growth, Kunstverein Hannover – Hanovre, 15 April–26 June 2011 www.kunstverein-hannover.de

- On The Metaphor Of Growth, Kunsthaus Baselland – Basel, 21 May–10 July 2011
 www.kunsthausbaselland.ch

- On The Metaphor Of Growth, Frankfurter Kunstverein – Basel, 27 May–31 July 2011
 www.fkv.de

- Invertebrate, part of Lustwarande ’11 – Raw, De Pont, Tilburg, Hollande, 28 May–18 September 2011
 – www.depont.nl 

- Shape of Things to come, Saatchi Gallery – London (UK), du 3 June–16 October 2011 www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk

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