LES OUBLIÉES
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Aman iman
Published:6th Dec '21
Should be back in stock very soon
Almost a century later, at a time when young artists are coming back to ancient processes for contemporary expression, how can we reinterpret and extend this face-to-face encounter between the artist and the glass plate, its light and its material? In the same way, in an era that claims the place of women in the history of art, how can we question or shake up this so ordinary phenomenon of domination, whether it is the relationship to women of the artists themselves, or a certain form of resistance still today to place women artists at the heart of the creation. We have chosen to ask Anaïs Boudot to take up this challenge, that of an artistic confrontation around the cliché under glass, as well as that of a response to the veil that has long been imposed on women artists. Anaïs Boudot has created a series of works on a set of anonymous glass plates from her collection, all of which represent female figures. A modernity in the materials, in the light as well as in the tone that both challenges and imposes itself in this vis-à-vis with Picasso and Brassaï. It was following a glass plate forgotten by Brassaï in Picasso’s studio that the latter began to develop a particular work on this medium. “And indeed, it is no longer virgin,” exclaimed Brassaï when he discovered the plate reworked by Picasso, as Héloïse Conésa recalls in her introduction. Taking up the words of Anne Baldassari, she continues: “The artist-toro bends over the mortal wound that he inflicts on reality so that the figure so beautiful on the silver plate may emerge. A few years later, Brassaï began his Transmutations series in which he engraved not on blank plates but on original negatives. Faced with these two sacred monsters of modern art, Anaïs Boudot responds to an invitation from The Eyes, by taking her own collection of anonymous faces on glass, to rework them with gelatin. Among these portraits of anonymous people from the 20s, 30s and 40s, women’s faces stand out. Where Picasso and Brassaï’s scratching of the gelatin is similar to a “surgical act much more intrusive to bring out the plasticity of the work”, Anaïs Boudot chooses gilding to restore these images...
ISBN: 9791092727456
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 330g
80 pages