Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Palimpsests, 2017 |
The good news about the selection process for the Prix
Marcel Duchamp is that there’s very little to argue about with the choice for winner.
But this is also the bad news because of the four 2017 finalists (now on
display at the Centre Pompidou), as is often the case, the winner’s work is above
and beyond the conceptual and artistic merit of the others. This year, there’s
no question that Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige’s installation is the
worthy winner of the prize. The other three entries are, however,
disappointing. Maja Bajivec, Charlotte Moth and Vittorio Santo’s work doesn’t have the complexity and challenge that we
might expect from the leading contemporary artists working in France today.
Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige, Palimpsests, 2017 |
Hadjithomas and Joreige present a series of pieces
representing the process of what is known as “coring”: when a machine pulls out
(in the shape of an apple core) the sediments that lay beneath construction
sites in Athens, Beirut and Paris. The result is a fascinating collection of
film, installation and sketches. The stones unearthed from beneath the three
cities in which they live are suspended in resin tubes and hung from the
ceiling of the exhibition space. They were very beautiful, some of them even had
these silver faces that made them look like gem stones. It was striking to note
also how what exists beneath these cities with extremely different histories,
politics, cultures, values, symbolic significance and vastly different situations
on the world stage are almost identical when reduced to rocks suspended in
resin.
Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige Installation View |
The rocks are supposedly remainders of buried cities, the
subterranean world that exist beneath each of the three cities. Thus, in the
tubes we see a physical manifestation of the past, the excavation of what has
otherwise been forgotten and “erased” in the name of progress. The text
accompanying the exhibit claims it represents a digging into the past in order
to explore the present. However, to me, the works do more than that: they show traces
of the unknown, ignored worlds that have been covered over by the sameness of
progress. In addition, the extra-large vials preserve the past: they store
traces of worlds that cannot be seen in the anticipation of a future
generation. Maybe someone in the future, archaeologists will be able to
decipher geological finds. It’s also quite easy to imagine the tragedies and
other human stories that might be fosilized in the stones, but that are not
yet legible. No doubt the new technologies of the future will enable
legibility.
A film that accompanies the hanging tubes represents the
difference between the cities rebuilt, that is, what is laid over the top of
the ruins and underground cities: they are whole new worlds that have little
concern for the past. Around the edges of the gallery we see excavation and
geological drawings and photographs, together with narratives about the cities,
the processes of building, coring, erasing and exposing the past as it has been
surreptitiously wiped away. The artists’ giving of a story to these events is
so speculative that it becomes abstract, almost like poetry.
Images courtesy of Centre Pompidou
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