FROM 04 FEB 2017 TO 07 MAY
2017
The Serralves Museum of
Contemporary Art presents A Time Coloured Space, a major exhibition by French
artist Philippe Parreno, his first in Portugal. Curated by the Director of the
Museum, Suzanne Cotter, the exhibition will span all thirteen rooms of the Museum,
across two floors, and extending to the Museum’s Auditorium.
A Time Coloured Space is
structured on the mathematical model of the fugue, and conceived around the
idea of the counterpoint, or ritournelle, a principle, whereby a particular
passage is repeated at regular interludes within a musical arrangement to
create compositional meaning. Governed by a similar method, A Time Coloured
Space is determined not by its ‘objects’, but by the regularity and rhythm of
their appearance. The exhibition features some of Parreno’s most emblematic
work dating from the 1990s to the present and new works created specifically
for the context.
Throughout his practice,
Parreno has redefined the exhibition experience by exploring its possibilities
as a coherent ‘object’ and a medium in its own right, rather than as a
collection of individual works. To this end, he conceives his exhibitions as a
scripted space in which a series of events unfolds. Placed within the
philosophical framework of Gilles Deleuze’s Difference and Repetition (1968),
each of the exhibition’s thirteen rooms is a recurrence of the last,
differentiated only by variations in colour and arrangement. By introducing
these recurring variables, Parreno takes the ritournelle principle beyond its
musical understanding to what Deleuze described as ‘a repetition of the
different’. As the past and the future are inscribed into the present, the
exhibition becomes an automaton, a factory in which to engineer these
variables, and a form of imitation becomes a new invention.
Among the works included
are Parreno’s Speech Bubbles (1997 and ongoing), helium-filled balloons in the
shape of cartoon speech bubbles. Empty of words, they congregate and hover on
the ceiling of the space they inhabit. Also returning is Fraught Times: For
Eleven Months of the Year it’s an Artwork and then December it’s Christmas
(2008-2016), an ongoing series of aluminium sculptures cast as snow-covered
Christmas trees.
More than 200 of Parreno’s
ink drawings, created between 2012 and 2016, and the series of screen prints
titled Fade To Black will also be on display. A series of light objects: AC/DC
Snakes and Happy Ending will also punctuate the space.
A recent addition to the
Serralves Museum’s permanent collection, the spectacular light work Quasi
Objects: Marquee (cluster) will be installed in the auditorium foyer,
signalling the cinema’s presence.
The Auditorium of the
Museum will be transformed into a form of cinéma en permanence.
On Friday 3 February, to
mark the launch of the exhibition, pianist Mikhail Rudy will perform
Shostakovich’s Fugue, No. 24 in D-Minor. For the duration, the composition will
be repeated on the Disklavier piano by a computer programme attempting to learn
the musical score, in a continued iteration and reprise that will in turn
activate lights, a revolving wall, and window blinds that permeate the
exhibition’s framework.
‘Philippe Parreno: A Time
Coloured Space’ is organized by the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, and
is accompanied by a publication written by Adam Thirwell in collaboration with
Philippe Parreno and designed by Frith Studio, London.
https://www.serralves.pt/en/activities/philippe-parreno-a-time-coloured-space/
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