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'Firmament' by Jean-Baptiste Janisset at Alain Gutharc Gallery, Paris

For five years, Jean-Baptiste Janisset has been surveying places of worship. In churches and cemeteries, calvaries and sanctuaries, the artist has been cataloguing motifs, symbols and glyphs: angels or bats, Virgins with Children or winged skulls, owls or pentacles. His journey, which took him from the south of France to Catalonia via Paris, was undertaken under the auspices of an energetic quest. It is a collection, both erudite and compulsive, but one that, beyond simple taxonomy, opens up a relationship. The body is in the act, engaged by an operation of moulding in situ of the fragments; as much as is initiated the interlocution, by a dialogue with the guardians of the spirit of the places - priests, magicians, marabouts or mediums.

From these molds, drawn in plaster then in silicone before being transited in lead, the artist realizes syncretic compositions. Often, the elements are acted within informal architectures: in the center of Firmament, the second solo exhibition of the artist at the Alain Gutharc gallery, a vehicle takes possession of the space. However, nothing of its presence makes up a mass nor is it apprehended by a single glance: the surface catches the eye as much as the form is concealed, and in the proliferation of motifs, the eye gets lost in a network of radiating rhythms. There is no more total form, identifiable or assignable, only this infinite swarming of symbols which, while expressing themselves each from an idiom with a lost code, compose together the chords of a cosmic harmony.
The work in question, Vers l’infini et audelà, provides a sculptural elevation and indicates the possibility of a journey. Its elements have been juxtaposed to form a membrane that imperfectly envelops a paradoxical structure: a mass-produced children’s carriage purchased on Leboncoin. It is an attempt to manifest, within a post-industrial material culture, something of the incantatory rise of the “murmur of societies” that the historian Michel de Certeau evoked. By placing the interpretation of collective signs under the auspices of a “cultural poaching”, he attributed to each person the fabrication of a symbolic cohesion beyond the established meanings, uses or scripts.

On the walls of the gallery, a series of smaller scale pieces introduce the color obtained through a process of metal alloying. By transferring to the surface of the pieces images of astronomy or fractals gleaned from Google, the artist also merges two systems of belief and representation of the beyond. In a recursive loop, the myth of progress and the religion of scientism, precision optics and geometric objects, join the hundred or so mystical symbols listed by the artist. They represent a variant of it, also located in a relative space-time, the ones and the others linking together in the manner of the hologram which, at the top of the sculpture-vehicle, comes to draw a knot of heart.
One has, in the course of the evolutions of the media and technological infrastructure, wanted to reread the figure of the “poacher” in various ways. Thus, the first book of the media theorist Henry Jenkins refers directly to it: with Textual Poachers, published in 1992, the American analyzes the participative culture of the fans, a first study taken up by Matt Hills who, in Fan Cultures, will introduce the concept of “performative consumption”. For Jean-Baptiste Janisset, meaning is similarly born from a reconfiguration of collective signs - those of the public space, those of the networked infosphere. But rather than sticking to the extended lineage of the poachers, it is here the posture of the artist which, in its turn, is redefined: subjective without being individual, it places itself to the listening of incantatory ascents, such as in interaction with the shared beliefs.

The primacy of the representation or the uniqueness of the creation, as much as the iconological grid of reading, current marotte of the anthropological analyses of the image3, bows here before a de-sharing of the sensitive. And invites to tie new conductive alliances between believer and fan, artist and viewer. 

— Ingrid Luquet-Gad

12.3.22 — 16.4.22

Photo by Aurélien Mole

Alain Gutharc Gallery

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'Pupila' by Elizabeth Burmann Littin at Two seven two gallery, Toronto

'Auxiliary Lights' by Kai Philip Trausenegger at Bildraum 07, Vienna

'Inferno' by Matthew Tully Dugan at Lomex, New York

'Зamok', Off-Site Group Project at dentistry Dr. Blumkin, Moscow

'Dog, No Leash', Group Show at Spazio Orr, Brescia

'Syllables in Heart' by Thomas Bremerstent at Salgshallen, Oslo

'Out-of-place artifact', Off-Site Project by Artem Briukhov in Birsk Fortress, Bi

'Gardening' by Daniel Drabek at Toni Areal, Zurich

'HALF TRUTHS', Group Show at Hackney Road, E2 8ET, London

'Unknown Unknowns' by Christian Roncea at West End, The Hague

'Thinking About Things That Are Thinking' by Nicolás Lamas at Meessen De Clercq,

‘Funny / Sad’, Group Show by Ian Bruner, Don Elektro & Halo, curated by Rhizome P

'Don’t Die', Group Show at No Gallery, New York

'Almost Begin' by Bronson Smillie at Afternoon Projects, Vancouver

'I'll Carry Your Heart's Gray Wing with a Trembling Hand to My Old Age', Group Sh

'hapy like a fly' by Clément Courgeon at Colette Mariana, Barcelona

'Fear of the Dark' by Jack Evans at Soup, London

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