March 1–August 25, 2024
76 allées Charles de Fitte
Les Abattoirs, Musée - Frac Occitanie Toulouse
31300 Toulouse
France
Hours: Wednesday–Sunday 12–6pm,
Thursday 12–8pm
T +33 5 62 48 58 00
lesabattoirs@lesabattoirs.org
The Artists and Farmers exhibition explores the rich and varied connections between artists and farmers, through the spectrum of the challenges facing the agricultural world today. Bringing together some 150 artworks, the exhibition aims to give context to and emphasize the intersections between art and agriculture, while examining the way in which this exchange has developed as the relationship between humans and their environment has been redefined.
In recent years, some artists have sought to go beyond the idealised and sometimes limited view of the rural world portrayed in the Épinal images, to instead look at the social, economic and environmental realities faced by farmers today. These artists are seeking to better represent and understand a group of people who are at both the centre of society and its margins, and who, after having comprised the majority of the French population for centuries, today carry out their profession bound by the twin contradictions of increased productivity and a respect for nature. Although the years after the World War II marked a decisive turning point for agricultural production in the West, shifting to an intensive and industrial model, the early twenty-first century has seen a time of unprecedented transformation and new understanding.
Taking a thematic approach, the exhibition addresses issues of how farmers are portrayed, of seeds and the making of landscape, as well as farming practices and know-how, bringing to the forefront both historic and emerging artists who have placed the figure and the work of farmers at the heart of their artistic practice. In particular, it re-examines the arrival of the rural world into museums in the 19th century through the work of painters such as Jean-François Millet, Rosa Bonheur and Jules Breton, whose artworks the Musée d’Orsay has exceptionally agreed to loan. With their interest in the outdoors, the countryside and animals, these artists introduced portrayals of farming life and work into the field of fine arts. The twentieth century saw a continued interest in and a desire to preserve this rural way of life through the creation of museums of ethnology and traditional practices, which are represented here thanks to important loans by the Mucem (Marseille).
Some of the artists who have been instrumental in portraying the contemporary world of farming in France are present, such as filmmaker Agnès Varda, as well as pioneering artists Agnes Dénes, Lois Weinberger and Gianfranco Baruchello, who from the 1970s onwards, made the act of planting an artistic and political gesture. All convey, in various ways—though generally through direct relationships with farmers themselves—multifaceted accounts that had previously been romanticised or even set aside. Through their artworks, these artists draw our attention to the realities and difficulties of farming life, and present new depictions of it, while challenging the distance between places of production and places of consumption. Each artwork provides us with a way to re-establish our bonds with the living world and the very hands that feed us, opening up fertile creative ground for reconnecting artistic and agricultural practices
List of exhibited artists
Maria Thereza Alves, Jean Amblard, Mathieu Asselin, Adrián Balseca, Gianfranco Baruchello, Julien Beneyton, Michel Blazy, Rosa Bonheur, Thierry Boutonnier, Jules Breton, Mathilde Caylou, Pierre Creton, Henri Cueco, Marinette Cueco, Ágnes Dénes, Morgane Denzler, Morgan Fache, Nina Ferrer-Gleize, Aurélie Ferruel and Florentine Guédon, Sylvain Gouraud, Annabel Guérédrat, Suzanne Husky, Fabrice Hyber, Inland, Kako & Stéphane Kenkle, Léon Lhermitte, Aurelia Mihai, Jean-François Millet, Asunción Molinos Gordo, Nelly Monnier and Éric Tabuchi, Tony Morgan, Hassan Musa, Myvillages, Le Nouveau Ministère De l’Agriculture (Suzanne Husky and Stéphanie Sagot), Aurélie Olivier, Daniel Otero Torres, Jean-Baptiste Perret, Karoll Petit, Terence Pique, Émilie Pitoiset, Tabita Rezaire with Yussef Agbo-Ola, Pascal Rivet, Damien Rouxel, Noémie Sauve, Daniel Spoerri, Jade Tang, Nicolas Tubéry, Agnès Varda, Simone Villemeur-Deloume, Lois Weinberger.
Curators
Julie Crenn, independent curator / Lauriane Gricourt, director of Les Abattoirs / Annabelle Ténèze, director of the Louvre-Lens.