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Xavier Veilhan by The Selby in 2010 |
Communiqué de la galerie :
Artist Xavier Veilhan has been selected to represent France at
the 57th Venice Biennale (May 13 - November 26, 2017) with his project Musical Merzbau (working title). Xavier
Veilhan imagines an overall environment that encompasses the entire
surface of the pavilion and so altering our perception of it, much in
the continuity of his former immersive works
The Studio (1993),
The Forest and
The Cave
(both 1998); an installation in a formal vocabulary borrowed from the
universe of the recording studio and inspired by Kurt Schwitters’
seminal work, the
Merzbau. Like clearings, a few more
functional spaces appear for rehearsing, experimenting, mixing or
recording. Various musicians from all backgrounds are called upon to
activate the structure and turn it into the ideal arena for their
creations during the six months of the biennial. In this way
Musical Merzbau bears witness to Xavier Veilhan’s ongoing development of exhibition platforms like
The Hyperrealist Project (2003),
The Glass Wall (2003) or
Le Baron de Triqueti
(2006), with which he continually questions the concept of the
exhibition itself, in his search to somehow extend it. The pavilion
becomes a place of fusion between contemporary art and music, in the
framework of the Bauhaus and Black Mountain College experiments.
Xavier
Veilhan was born in 1963 and lives and works in Paris. Since the 1980s
he reinvents statuary and develops a multi-shaped approach between
formal classicism and high technology. He has a long-standing interest
in the often-evolving exhibition space in which the visitor becomes an
active participant and is invited to a new reading of his surroundings.
His numerous works in the public space often respond to the same
principle. Veilhan cultivates his research with regular musical
collaborations with artists like Sébastien Tellier, the band Air or
pioneer composer Eliane Radigue. In 2012 he started developing
Architectones,
a series of interventions in seven major modernist buildings around the
world. His interest for architecture rose to a new level in 2014 when
he designed the château de Rentilly with architects Bona+Lemercier and
scenographer Alexis Bertrand. He has directed two films in 2015 that
prolong these spatial explorations:
Vent Moderne and
Matching Numbers. That same year, the double exhibition
Music
at Galerie Perrotin, both in New York and in Paris, honored the music
producers that shape the sound of our time, a project that wholly
nourished the idea of
Musical Merzbau and his planned collaborations for the French pavilion.
In charge of ensuring French representation at the Venice Biennales for contemporary art and architecture, the
Institut français, agency of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Development, is the producer of the French Pavilion alongside the
French Ministry of Culture and Communication.
Musical Merzbau is produced by
ARTER, with the participation of
We Love Art, the
Académie de l’Opéra de Paris and
Cité de la musique | Philharmonie de Paris.
Xavier Veilhan sur Alice au pays des arts :
Veilhan at Hatfield, Promenade 2012
Orchestra, 2011, galerie Perrotin
Versailles, 2009