Christian Boltanski: Après

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Christian Boltanski on his Paris 2021 exhibition, 'Après.' Video by Joran Leroux-Gipouloux

Galerie Marian Goodman is pleased to present "Après", Christian Boltanski's first solo exhibition in France since his retrospective at the Centre Pompidou a year ago.

In this show laid out over the two floors of the gallery, Boltanski gives free rein to his interest in a form of total art in which the works develop their own scenography. Articulated in a coherent whole, they stimulate all the vectors of perception, whether direct or deeper in the private world of memory. 

"The experience I want visitors to have in each of my exhibitions is not necessarily to understand but to feel that something has happened,"explains the artist.

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List of Works
 | Press Releases: English | French | German 
Exhibition Dates: 20 January - 13 March 2021

A very horrible yet interesting thing has occurred since Covid is here, which is, that death is no longer hidden. Death used to be completely denied by us, and nowadays, because of this disease, we are talking about death as something that is around us and that is present, says Boltanski.

This exhibition comprises a new set of sculptures combined with video projections, a big new video installation in the basement, and, in conclusion, two other, older installations.

On the ground floor, masses of white cloths on trolleys randomly fill the centre of the room. In these new works titled Les Linges (2020), which the artist began working on during the lockdown last spring, Boltanski's emblematic materials "take on a new meaning in connection with the events we are living through." We are invited to lose ourselves as we walk among these forms that slowly stir memories of an atmosphere or experience we have known.

This installation is juxtaposed with projections on the walls titled Les Esprits (2020). In them we see the faces of...
Christian Boltanski
Les Esprits, 2020
Video projection, intermittent display of black and white imagery, silent, continuous loop
Dimensions variable
Edition of 3

This installation is juxtaposed with projections on the walls titled Les Esprits (2020). In them we see the faces of children, their barely visible features gently fading, like fleeting memories. At first ghostly, the faces then appear more distinctly on the walls as the light dims, thereby creating a dynamic interaction with the characteristics of the gallery space.

It’s about the ghosts that are linked to us, the ones we remember, and that appear like this on the walls. Since I used these images many times before, these ghosts are more like my own, and downstairs, they are rather like everyone’s ghosts, ” says Boltanski.

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'Le Passage,' 2020, a barely visible, mysterious video accompanies viewers and invites them to go downstairs.

On the lower level, the video installation Les Disparus (2020) spreads over four large curtains on which "clichéd videos of a fabricated vision of happiness hide subliminal images of the horrors that took place in the century I was born into and that unfolded in parallel to part of my life," explains the artist. "For most of us, they remain present in our subconscious."

The word Après (After, 2016) invites us to enter the more peaceful space of Les Vitrines (The Vitrines, 1995).

"Someone once explained to me that in Shinto shrines, in sanctuaries, there are a series of passages from one room to another, and in the last room there is a mirror, which means, that in the end, what do we see? We only see ourselves," says Boltanski.

Christian Boltanski was born in Paris in 1944. Since his very first exhibition at a Parisian cinema, Le Ranelagh, in 1968, Boltanski's work has been shown in numerous spaces around the world. In 1984 the Musée National d'Art Moderne gave him his first retrospective. In 1988 several major American museums organised an important touring retrospective. Between 2012 and 2018 he worked on projects in Chile, Brazil, Argentina and Mexico. In 2018 his work was shown in China at the Powaer Station of Art in Shanghai, at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem and at the European Centre for Art and Industrial Culture in Völklingen, Germany. In 2019, in addition to his retrospective at the Centre Pompidou (Mnam) in Paris, he had a Japanese exhibition touring to the National Museum of Art in Osaka, the National Art Gallery in Tokyo and the Prefectural Art Museum in Nagasaki. Between 2001 and 2014, Boltanski won several prizes for his work.

Press contact:
Xaver von Mentzingen: xaver@mariangoodman.com or + 33 (0)1 48 04 70 52

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