|
According to Carl Jung, scientific experimental inquiry has often
resulted in a psychologically biased view of the natural world,
which discounts that which cannot be statistically grasped. The
perceptions of unique intangibles may amass a chaotic collection
of curiosities, rather like those old natural history cabinets where
anatomical monsters are suspended in bottles, and just next to that
is the horn of a unicorn, a dried carcass of a mermaid and a stack
of 19th century "spirit" photos all presented as "evidence"
of the inexplicable anomalies of the physical world. And while each
of these things can be easily revealed as a hoax by a thinking person,
ephemeral events and manufactured relics are continually rationalized
to exist as fragmentary beliefs in a person's mind. A mind where
dreams or fantasies are confused with reality
It is humankind's ongoing attempts to fathom the relationship between
the corporeal and the spiritual that seem to have led artist Jean-Michel
Fauquet to explore his phantasmagorical imaginings through constructed
realities, meticulously crafted, photographed, and manipulated into
a series of unhinged events and made up relics whose meaning has
been lost to the frail memory of history.
While Fauquet's primary medium is photography, his work begins
with the construction of settings, objects made of cardboard, dust,
dirt, paper clips, glue and the mysteries of the soul. The exhibition
consists of two large scale portraits with peculiar implements inserted
into the mouth of the subject. There are also a multitude of close-ups
of what Fauquet terms "unnamable objects". The artist's
initial preparation begins with making sketches of imaginary things
which are then constructed and photographed. The negatives are then
scratched and drawn upon, and the prints are seeped in oil paint
highlights and a residue of wax. The result is more like a drawing
than a photograph.
There are images of stairway labyrinths leading no where and yet
there is an uncanny paramnesia, a déjà vu which may
settle on the mind grasping for some recognition and the comfort
of understanding the incomprehensible. These settings where a heap
of cloth serves as an understudy for a mountain range allows the
artist and the viewers' minds eye to believe that a faux-relic construction
when photographed becomes an image of a monumental thing; a theatrical
crescendo crafted out of darkness rather than light. These incredible
relics thus require a mysterious setting deepened with the patina
of a black edge that underlines the opposition to the edge of the
image within the image, and the belief or imaginings within the
artist and the viewers' mind. The resulting work is an enigma; a
created illusion, a mimic which imitates the natural world and implies
a divinity where there is none.
By Andrew Cornell Robinson
Written for the
Gay City News
Exhibition Information
Jean-Michel Fauquet - "Kaïros"
3 May through 30 June 2007
Haim Chanin Fine Arts
121 West 19th Street 10th Floor
New York, NY 10011
www.haimchanin.com
|

Ordalies 3 - La Mante, 2006
Silverprint on baryte paper with oil paint highlights
11 13/16 x 11 13/16 inches
Ordalies 2 - Le Berceau,
2006
Silverprint on baryte paper with oil paint highlights
11 13/16 x 11 13/16 inches
Ordalies 1 - Les Sabots, 2006
Silverprint on baryte paper with oil painthighlights
11 13/16 x 11 13/16 inches
MTP 2 - Bago, 2006
Digital pigment print
42.5 x 44 inches
Images courtesy of the artist and Haim Chanin Fine Arts
|