Raymond Hains: Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris."Raymond Hains Raymond Hains (Dinard, 1926 - Paris, October 28, 2005) was a French artist and photographer. Biography In 1945 he briefly enrolled in the sculpture course at the École des Beaux-Arts, Rennes and met Jacques de la Villeglé that same year. He then collaborated with E. , la tentative": The very title of the show--"Raymond Hains: The Attempt"--underscores the difficulties involved in mounting a Hains retrospective. The first challenge is posed by the sheer variety of the artist's oeuvre, from his photographs taken through fluted lenses and the torn posters he first realized with Jacques de la Villegle in to his Nouveau Realiste work alongside Yves Klein Yves Klein (28 April 1928 - 6 June 1962) was a French artist and is considered an important figure in post-war European art. New York critics of Klein's time classify him as neo-Dada, but other critics, such as Thomas McEvilley in an essay submitted to Artforum in 1982, have since in the '60s, to his recent collages of digital images, "Macintoshages," 1997-. The second hurdle is Hains himself, who has long avoided participation in a retrospective, leaving the task to curators such as Daniel Abadie, who organized the first Hams survey, at the Centre National d'Art et de Culture in Paris in 1976. Hains has always preferred looking ahead to checking the rearview mirror; he favors the adventure of art over his own consecration. Hence, his career, like his work, has been nonlinear, made up of digressions, missed appointments, lateral moves, and temporary disappearances: the sinuous sinuous /sin·u·ous/ (sin´u-us) bending in and out; winding. sinuous bending in and out; winding. path of an artist impossible to pinpoint. Those who attended Documenta X in 1997 will not soon forget his contribution: Invited by curator Catherine David, Rains exhibited in a Kassel shop rather than at the Fredericianum and organized a parade that traveled through the city, a joyous march led by a larger-than-life-size mannequin of the late Iris Clert Iris Clert was the owner of the Galerie Iris Clert from 1955 to 1971. During its tenure, her gallery became an avant-garde hotspot in the international art scene, particularly to Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, and Arman. , Hains's gallerist and a towering figure in the Paris art world of the '60s. It was a carnivalesque scene, drawing a slightly bewildered crowd of artists, critics, curators, and museum-goers--an improvised display, a manifesto for a work in progress, a true oeuvre en marche. Now, at seventy-five, Hains has finally agreed to set down, at least for the moment, the trademark suitcases in which he keeps all his documentation and take stock of his work, through the intermediary of an exhibition that spans from the mid-century fluted-lens images to such recent series as "Strasbourg-Beaubourg," 1999-2000, and "Serra-Serralves," 1999, photographs that make visual and linguistic associations between, for example, a Richard Serra Richard Serra (born 2 November 1939) is an American minimalist sculptor and video artist known for working with large scale assemblies of sheet metal. Serra was involved in the Process Art Movement. sculpture in Bilbao and the Fundacao de Serralves in Porto. Greeting viewers at the entrance to the show was a new work, titled Palissade CIC CIC circulating immune complexes. CIC Circulating immune complexes. See Immune complexes. , 2001, a Plexiglas barricade inspired by surveillance systems in banks; at the survey's center was its strongbox: the artist's website, Mon Encyclopedia Clartes, 2001, a network of images and texts encompassing Hains's career that collectively form a mosaic, an apt metaphor for the varied works he has produced. In 1976, the French poet and critic Alain Jouffroy came up with this striking formulation of the artist s oeuvre: " For over twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. Rains has been weaving the strangest spiderweb (tool) Spiderweb - A program for creating versions of Knuth's WEB self-documenting programs ("literate programming"). ftp://princeton.edu/. in the world: one made of a sun that will only illuminate coincidences everywhere." As exhibition organizer Christine Macel, a curator at the Centre Pompidou, points out in the exhibition catalogue, Jouffroy's description places Hains's work squarely in the contemporary context of the Internet, metaphorically casting the artist as a grand webmaster of twentieth-century art. Hains himself has said that he works "on a sort of web" and defines himself not as an "artist who paints paintings" but as an inaction painter," a "rapprocheur d'images." Juggling words and images, Rains thus pairs the giant mannequin of Iris Clert in Kassel with similar figures made in the small French village of Cassel (Raymond Hains avec Reuze Papa et Reuze Mama Cassel, 1997); juxtaposes in a readymade installation the name Otto Hahn with a bottle of Petrole Rahn shampoo (Hommage Boronali, Petrole Hahn, 1989); installs the Trojan horse in Troyes (Neo-Dada emballe, 1963); and, invoking the Roman name for Brittany, transforms the American Express logo (Armorican Express, 1987). It is less a matter of simple wordplay than of hackerlike intervention: In the '50s, Hains participated in a proto-Situationist demonstration organized by Le Front Humain des Citoyens du Monde n. 1. The world; a globe as an ensign of royalty. Le beau monde fashionable society. See Beau monde. Demi monde See Demimonde. (including Camus, Sartre, Andre Breton, and Orson Welles), which called for worldwide democracy to take the place of to be substituted for. - Berkeley. See also: Place a global capitalist econom y, and he has retained some of the spirit of that political action, engaging with the brand names Shell and Citroen, as well as with Yves Klein's 1KB blue and Daniel Buren's stripes. In 1964, as further proof of his prescience pre·science n. Knowledge of actions or events before they occur; foresight. prescience Noun Formal knowledge of events before they happen [Latin praescire to know beforehand] with regard to the art of today, he invented the artists Seita and Saffa--their names are taken from French and Italian tobacco companies, respectively--and attributed a body of work to them, including the giant book of matches first shown in Paris in 1965. With Seita and Saffa, Hains created an artistic fiction resulting in a range of products located somewhere between Pop art and ironic capitalist enterprise. That said, the play with language, the penchant for punning, and the enormous literary and historical bank on which Rains unceasingly draws have at times occluded the eminently visual character of his work. It is precisely this aesthetic dimension that the retrospective seeks to bring out: not just Hains's invention of forms and the plurality of his materials, but his role as scopic interpreter of signs inscribed in·scribe tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes 1. a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface. b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters. in the landscape. Like the abstract film Penelope, 1950-54, made with Villegle, the exhibition reveals Hains's ongoing concern with color, especially bright color. Through the lacerated lacerated /lac·er·at·ed/ (las´er-at?ed) torn; mangled; wounded by a jagged instrument. lac·er·at·ed adj. Cut or wounded in a jagged manner. posters, photographies-constats (photographic reports), readymades--e.g., La Foire aux skis (The ski fair), 1988, a wall of Rossignol skis--and installations, this survey firmly establishes its subject in the register of the "ocular" arts. And it is the privileging of the visual in Hains's work that makes this retrospective so eye-opening. Jean-Max Colard is a Paris-based writer and critic. Translated from French by Jeanine Herman. "Raymond Hains, la tentative" travels to Moore College Art Galleries, Philadelphia, and the Santa Monica Museum of Art The Santa Monica Museum of Art is a museum located in Santa Monica, California. External links
Santa Monica is a coastal city in western Los Angeles County, California, USA. Situated on Santa Monica Bay of the Pacific Ocean, it is surrounded by the City of Los Angeles — Pacific Palisades and Brentwood on the north, , in 2003-2004. |
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