This is the first exhibition of a new gallery. Funny (how I've stopped lovin' you) is the title of a project started by the artist exactly 10 years ago and one that has recently been reactivated by the discovery of a work of art by James Coleman, Clara and Dario (1975). In the exhibition the hypotheses move between the four rooms, offering different viewpoints via photography, wall-paintings, posters and canvases.
Funny (how I've stopped lovin' you)
The first solo exhibition of the French artist Gerald Petit in Portugal will also be the
first exhibition of a new gallery - Caroline Page's Gallery - the new face of Caroline
Page's's project within the context of national contemporary art. Since The Artroom,
the development of this project, both in terms of concept and a new space, has
been clearly related to the idea of giving greater visibility to artists, be they
established or emerging, national or international. Particular importance is given to
the exchange of contacts and artists' mobility in this field.
Funny (how I've stopped lovin' you) is the title of a project started by the artist,
Gerald Petit, exactly 10 years ago and one that has recently been reactivated by
the discovery of a work of art by James Coleman, Clara and Da'rio (1975). The
reminiscence of a memory, of a narration, of a state (in this case of a state of love)
informs the works in this exhibition.
The exhibition title comes from a Nat King Cole song (Funny not much), which pits
an old romantic melody against a love drama while simultaneously working as an
oxymoron, just like the titles Nevermore, Out of nowhere or Les de'sirs ne'gatifs
used by Gerald Petit. He puts the anomaly between the perception of the image
and its meaning, between the exactness of photography and its very enigma,
between the assembled reference and its resonance towards the image into
perspective.
In the exhibition the hypotheses move between the four rooms, offering different
viewpoints via photography, wall-paintings, posters and canvases.
This exhibition presents a new vision of Gerald Petit's recent work, one that has
long studied all the many means of creating images, from photography to painting,
via graphic work or rumour, to expand the sphere of procedures.
The display of the pieces produces the narration contained in each image, creating
links between them, and that sparkle lets the viewer organise the adventures that
originate from that collection, influencing the interpretation of meaningful images,
which the interpretation, in itself, is unable to uncover. Gerald Petit often alludes to
Le Bernin's “Composed" principle, which placed painting, sculpture and architecture
together in forming one image according to the eye that sees it, supported by the
perspective.
In general, the preference for the immediacy for a specific time that ends up,
however, lasting in the intense relationship with the world, produces an enduring
motivation in the artist's quest. These are moments of the re-discovery of people,
places, stories and tales that move within a construction that is almost always, but
not only, a fiction of reality.
The image constitutes a productive foundation in the exploration of a relationship
between a fictitious world and what is presented in it as a sign of what is real. That
is also the relevance of Petit's work: reformulating characters and content and
taking advantage of the ambivalence the scenario of the illusion has at its disposal.
The displacement of the body, of gestures and of objects in relation to the physical
and temporal space creates the image of a parallel world that lives on reality but
one that decides to indulge in other artifices.
It is important to think about the representational function of the images that the
work captures, the number of questions that each one asks of the conventions that
art has established throughout the ages. In the field of painting, the vision takes on
a clear line of perception that breaks away from the standardisation of this image
typology. In his analysis of Petit's work, the art critic Pascal Beausse states that
“The enigma of identity could bring all of the images he produces together", and
underlines the imperious view of the mysteries of identity in the artist's quest that
his works confirm.
In 2006, Gerald Petit participated in the collective exhibitions Notre Histoire - une
sce'ne artistique francaise e'mergente at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris and Supernova
at the Domaine Pommery in Reims (curator Judicael Lavrador), at the Tina B,
Prague Contemporary Art Biennial (exhibition curator Pascal Beausse) as well as at
the Echigo Tsumari Triennial in Japan (he also participated in the Hiroshima Art
Document in 2003, and in 2004), and at the Lisbon Light Biennial, Luzboa 2006.
In New York, Gerald Petit is represented by the gallery Lmak Projects; he has
participated in various collective exhibitions in the Yvon Lambert and Robert Mann
galleries in the city.
In France, he has had solo exhibitions at the Muse'e Nicephore Niepce and at the
Chapelle du Carmel in Chalon-sur-Saone, at the Centre d'Art Contemporain in Albi,
at the Centre Culturel l'Atheneum and at the Interface gallery in Dijon, as well as at
the Centre Photographique in Lectoure.
His work is also part of the French public collections at the Fonds National d'Art
Contemporain, at the Fonds Re'gional d'Art Contemporain d'Alsace and at the Muse'e
Nicephore Niepce, as well as in private collections in France, the USA and Germany.
Gallery and exhibition opening on February 1st, 2007:
18h-21h Press Preview
21h Opening
The artist will be present
Caroline Pages Gallery (new space)
Rua Tenente Ferreira Durao, 12-1 Dto.
[Campo de Ourique] 1350-315 Lisbon Portugal
Opening Hours: Monday-Wednesday 12am-5pm, Thursday-Friday 12am-8pm, Saturday 3-8pm and every day by appointment.