Philippe Drouguet- Blow Up
Material type:
- 9782359061024
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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SAF Reference Library | Visual Arts | N4390-5098 47.781 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4464 |
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N4390-5098 45.691 دبي بين العدسة و الريشة/ عفراء الدجيلي | N4390-5098 47.754 Drawn From Life | N4390-5098 47.776 Drop by then: Pieces of the scenery | N4390-5098 47.781 Philippe Drouguet- Blow Up | N4390-5098 49.254 Dublin Contemporary 2011- Guide Book | N4390-5098 49.315 Isn't She Lovely : Ayesha Durrani | N4390-5098 50.142 Surfacing- Angela Eames |
Philippe Droguet's works, at first glance attractive, organic and for some carnal, turn out to be strange or even menacing. The forms he creates fall within the registers of painting and sculpture. The artist draws on the constant parameters of sculpture, an art that is both visual and tactile, optical and haptic, which we know is embodied by the material, the volume and the way of occupying space, as much as by the surface, the epidermis that captures the light. The artist chooses his materials for example for what they operate in the work, the project he formulates for it. The list is long, disparate and potentially infinite but it makes up all the richness of the textures and the strangeness of the forms: screws, wallpaper seeds, bathtubs, birdhouses, gas canisters, socks, toothpicks, but also animal bones, highway paint or gunpowder for hunting cartridges. Paraffin freezes a sheet in folds, the upholsterer's seed, instead of being planted, adheres to the surface and presents its acrid points as a peel, the bark of the tree, skin among skins, sees itself protected by a layer of paraffin delicately brushed on. Droguet plays with volume, surface and material to incessantly explore the visibility and latency of things. His works thus settle on the thread between perception and consciousness, image and real body, that of the subject and that of the object; the work constantly oscillates between seduction and tragedy, a thin veil separating them, what the artist calls the "integument", that is to say the membrane, the skin, the surface, that which envelops and protects, that which covers and conceals, that which attracts and deceives, that which is displayed and simultaneously hidden from view.
English; French
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