image text special shop

'FEST' by Claude Eigan and Alizée Lenox at La Placette, Lausanne

article image; primary-color: #5E5F61;
Exhibition view
article image; primary-color: #5F6062;
Exhibition view
article image; primary-color: #999F9F;
Scapula scraps, 2018
article image; primary-color: #C1C5C8;
Owl, 2018
article image; primary-color: #5E6659;
Owl, 2018
article image; primary-color: #C8C8CA;
Exhibition view
article image; primary-color: #E2E0E1;
Alizée Lenox, Claude Eigan and Jake Kent, You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #D2CCCC;
Alizée Lenox, Claude Eigan and Jake Kent, You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #A6B0B1;
Blu1, 2018
article image; primary-color: #A29A85;
You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #DFDDDE;
Alizée Lenox, Claude Eigan and Jake Kent, You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #CECAC9;
Alizée Lenox, Claude Eigan and Jake Kent, You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #CBC6CD;
You must give your mind to all the faces, 2018
article image; primary-color: #B6B1B7;
You must give your mind to all the faces
article image; primary-color: #C6BEAB;
Exhibition view
article image; primary-color: #8B7D7D;
Ballad of the hippocampus, 2018

Fest (Stage II) is the second part of a series of interventions. Stage I took place at Motto Berlin with Alpina Huus on August 17th, and Stage II opened on September 7th at La Placette in Lausanne, Switzerland. It features works by Claude Eigan and Alizée Lenox and a special collaboration with artist Jake Kent.

Fest is inspired by the famous painting Ship of Fools by Hieronymus Bosch. Claude Eigan's own interpretation comes from a very personal experience, shared with her partner Alizée Lenox. The exhibition is articulated around a physiological fault: coincidentally, the mother of one and grandmother of the other both suffered at the same period from memory disorders, leaving them both in a permanent fog, a wobbly reality that oscillates between flashes of perfect lucidity and complete fictions.

From the spoken stories or notes of the two women, Fest is thought as a wandering, a post-anesthesia moment in which the cold clinical reality of a hospital opposes festive aspirations and lightness.

Carmagnole

11.07 am You've been here since Wednesday. The room is nice, there is a TV and a replica of a famous painting. You drink a coffee and will go out for a cigarette later. You don't know why you are here.

.....8.19 am .....The cigarette had a bitter taste but you've met some great people. .....You all went to the rooftop and had a party there. .....Everything was wonderful, you felt lighter.

5.54 pm You found your way back to the room. To celebrate you opened a cup of jelly water and mixed it with a small bag of sugar. You have 36 bags hidden in your upper drawer.

.....10 am .....Last night you went back to the party. .....Everybody was there and offered you many presents, .....there was chocolate pouring and fruits hanging everywhere. .....It was too much, you felt nauseous.

.....Something is dripping under your bed.

11.34 pm You wanted to write something so you could remember later but by the time you reached your notebook everything vanished again. You are wearing a red sweater, you have 2 daughters and 36 bags of sugar in your upper drawer.

.....3.38 am .....Up on the roof, people were holding hands dancing the Carmagnole. .....Sometimes very daring moves, very outrageous. .....You danced with them until dawn. .....It was fabulous. 

2.16 pm You woke up with your arms and legs tied to your bed. For your own safety, they say. A strange smell is floating in the room. The windows are locked too.

.....11.24 am .....You only remember the face of your lover the day you met. .....But when you see them entering this rat hole you think to yourself: .....Oh look at this stud, they gracefully aged!

6.47 am On your floor there are only old bodies. They wander in the hallway as if they were all looking for someone. They move so slow you can almost hear their bones cracking. Sometimes they come to see you and you tell them about the party. You only talk about the party.

.....5.09 am .....You drink beverages you never had before. .....Some were sour and some extremely spicy. .....Now you have this song stuck in your head 'Ah le petit vin blanc, .....qu'on boit sous les tonnelles'.

.....But you cannot tell more. .....It was so magnificent it would make .....everyone jealous

7.55 pm They said it has something to do with a Vitamin B1 deficiency. A lack of food vs an abundance of alcohol. You have 36 bags of sugar in your upper drawer.

7.9.18 — 6.10.18

Text and poem by Alizée Lenox and Claude Eigan

  • special collaboration with Jake Kent All images copyright Julien Gremaud and Claude Eigan

La Placette

'Meadowlands' by Max Capus and Mat Mancini at Paris London Hong Kong, Chicago

'CHARLES MANSON, TIMOTHY LEARY & THE RATS OF NIMH', Group Show at 4649 Gallery, T

'Fantastic Epiphany' by Malwine Stauss & Naiyun Yang at La Felce, Cologne

'Corporate values by Misha Gudwin at Supermetall, Moscow

'Ashes to Lashes, Dust to Lust', Group Show at GROVE, Berlin

'Victim of Cosmetics' by Claire Barrow in a repurposed office space, London

'Digital Anomalies' by Nicolás Lamas at FORM, Wageningen

'IT'S DIFFICULT TO EXPLAIN SO I STAY QUIET' by Lukas Glinkowski at Galería Fran R

'The place that can never be' by Anna Taganzeva at Plague Space, Krasnodar

'Chocolate Goblin' by Travis John Ficarra at Glasshouse, Victoria

'MILITARY POP', Group Show at Spas Setun, Moscow

TARGET GROUP SHOW, conceived by Hannes Schmidt at BRAUNSFELDER, Cologne

'DISTIRA' by Irati Inoriza at Galeria Fran Reus, Palma de Mallorca

'Underground Memorandum' by Richard Nikl at Shore, Vienna

'All Watched Over by Emissaries of Loving Grace' by Louis Morlæ at Duarte Sequeir

'itsanosofadog *It’s an arse of a dog' by Amanda Moström, Rose Easton, London

'Deceiving players' by Rimma Arslanov at KOENIG2 by_robbygreif, Vienna

'Sizzling Hot' by Rosa Lüders at 14a, Hamburg

Next Page