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Site odeon[degrees] 5: Pascal Convert. (Reviews).


The exhibition began outside, on the street: Drawings were painted on the gallery windows--long, multicolor, swirling, interlaced Refers to a display system or image that uses interlacing and does not render contiguous lines one after the other. See interlace and interlaced GIF.  strokes. They were on the walls, too, one saw, once past the door. These traces belong to the series "Native Drawings," which Pascal Convert began in 1997, based on his children's drawings (in the case of the works here, his daughter's). Sequenced and digitized, the scrawlings are projected as representations of three-dimensional objects. For each stroke, the artist selects a particular point of view and reconstructs the whole on the scale of the surface to be occupied, expanding from the sheet of paper to the wall and from the reach of a child's arm to the scale of an entire room. The drawings thus take possession of the space by disturbing the inherent flatness of the wall's surface through the multiplicity of the points of view that they combine.

These swirling, brightly colored strokes against the whiteness of the wall were echoed by the knotty knot·ty  
adj. knot·ti·er, knot·ti·est
1. Tied or snarled in knots.

2. Covered with knots or knobs; gnarled.

3. Difficult to understand or solve. See Synonyms at complex.
, ligneous lig·ne·ous  
adj.
Consisting of or having the texture or appearance of wood; woody.



[From Latin ligneus, from lignum, wood; see leg- in Indo-European roots.
 shapes of tree roots collected on the battlefield of Verdun and covered in india ink (Sans titre titre

titer.
 [Untitled], 2000). Black masses bearing witness to some of the darkest hours of the twentieth century, they seemed charred. In their beauty and horror they resembled Convert's black-lacquer cast of atomized cherry tree branches from the Seju-ji temple in Hiroshima (Cerisier atomise du temple Seju-ji, Hiroshima, 1997-98). Black, too, were the plaster casts taken from the surfaces of paintings made by the artist's father--the results of this process (all titled Empreinte de peinture, 2000) looking like paintings from which the color has been drained and where all that remains is the dialogue of shadow and light that echoes the rugged texture of the surface. This course through positive and negative (according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the principle of the imprint that underlies this exhibition and Convert's entire oeuvre) was bro ught to completion with Empreinte negative de jambe, 2000, the negative print of a leg--the positive, in asphalt, is found at the entrance--and the two works titled Empreinte negative de main, 2000, negative prints of hands, one in black wax and the other in white wax: parallelepipeds of wax hollowed out by a cavity joining the shape of a leg or two joined hands.

By moving forward through Convert's works, viewers could weave the skeins of a story together: a story of genealogy, as Convert's daughter's drawings meet his father's paintings, while the casts of parts of his body signal his own presence in the world; a story of humanity, from life to death, from carefree play to extreme violence, from childhood (that of art and of the world) to the funerary fu·ner·ar·y  
adj.
Of or suitable for a funeral or burial.



[Latin fner
 rites of embalming embalming (ĕmbä`mĭng, ĭm–), practice of preserving the body after death by artificial means. The custom was prevalent among many ancient peoples and still survives in many cultures. ; a story of techniques, where prehistoric wall paintings are reconfigured with the computer and natural forms are reproduced by being cast in suggestive materials and pushed to the extremes of complexity and refinement. All these intertwined stories are fundamentally anachronistic a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
, inscribing the work of memory at the heart of linear chronology and favoring the resurgence of multiple time frames, both biographical and historical, in the viewer's present. Beyond their variety of aspect, material, and form, all Convert's works share the same oscillation between the primitive gesture and high technology, between the weight of time and atemporality, between history and anachronism a·nach·ro·nism  
n.
1. The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.

2.
.
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Author:Maldonado, Guitemic
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Jun 22, 2001
Words:542
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