The Parisian
 
© Yves Belorgey 2010
© Yves Belorgey 2010
© Yves Belorgey 2010


ART

Yves Belorgey

Written 30 January

Thursday 18 February, 10:00
Galerie Xippas, 75003 [map]
Yves Belorgey

For his third exhibition at Galerie Xippas, Yves Bélorgey will present new paintings and drawings (from an ongoing series entitled Kyoto) made over the course of 2009, following his residency at the Villa Kujoyama in Japan.

For over fifteen years, Yves Bélorgey’s representations of urban landscapes have cast a critical eye on the edifices and modern architecture of the 1960s, representing them with a brutal frontality and exposing the social organization that conditions the urban system of the “banlieue,” the notorious Parisian suburbs. Bélorgey confronts collective architecture in a documentary method, according to its many potentialities for particular expression: he paints these landscapes both as places in which the “social body” undergoes training, and as an inventory of forms in which the “corpulent” presence of the surface of his canvases infallibly recalls the historical gauntlet of Modern painting.

The subject matter exhibited is not limited only to Bélorgey’s work in Japan—recent buildings and urban landscapes from the Parisian suburbs are also present, in an attempt to transcend geographic, national or esthetic criteria and thus permit a Japanese impression to resonate among them…like the harmony of a musical instrument. The paintings evoke once again the polemics of Modernism, and in particular, Modernity’s relationship with tradition in a country where the most functional architecture integrates vernacular formal elements that are sometimes surprising. Bélorgey also devotes particular attention to concerns of space and surface. As opposed to in Europe, the concept of a delimited space does not exist in Japan: the Japanese notion of space changes in relation to the view-points from which it is perceived from a static perspective. It is thus an intrinsically temporal space. In his paintings, Bélorgey clarifies and prolongs the connection between history and architecture, and simultaneously between these two and the concept of landscape, enabling him to broaden his perspective of architectural masses to integrate into his paintings elements of the juxtaposing environment, and thus addressing more closely issues of representation, of mater, and of rhythm.

For his solo-show, Bélorgey has invited the sound artist Atsushi Nishijima, who he met during his stay in Kyoto, to include several of his works. This proposal can symbolize affinities between art forms and between artists, and further hints at the relationship to otherness that results from a distancing from Japan, be it cultural or geographic, and a differentiation of medium. Atsushi Nishijima approaches sound as a means of apprehending invisible phenomena. In a delicate balance between humor and pedagogy, the strange sonorous objects search to valorize traditional Japanese thought—thought related to time in which the slowing down, the near decomposition, is source of creation.



What: Yves Belorgey
When: Thursday 18 February, 10:00
Where: Galerie Xippas, 108, rue Vieille du Temple 75003 [map]
Transport: Saint Sebastien Froissart
Cost: 0EUR
Phone: + 33 1 40 27 05 55
Web: www.xippas.com


Socialise


Share Digg! Stumble It!       
© 2008 The Parisian - Culture in Paris [site map] [privacy & legal] [agency] Add to Technorati Favorites  Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional Entertainment Blogs
Table 'edgeofth_paris.stat' doesn't exist