9 January - 27 February 2016
Paris

Steve MᶜQueen

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Overview

Marian Goodman Gallery in Paris is proud to announce an exhibition by Steve MᶜQueen to launch the 2016 season. We present Ashes, his latest film installation, as well as several new works produced especially for this, his fifth exhibition at the gallery. Steve MᶜQueen’s latest projects comprise a wall installation formed of 77 dark blue neon lights, each a unique handwritten version of the phrase Remember Me, as well as two sculptural works, Broken Column and Moonlit.

Steve MᶜQueen

January 9 – February 27, 2016
Opening Reception: Saturday, January 9,  6-8 pm

“I want to put the public in a situation where everyone becomes acutely sensitive to themselves, to their body and respiration.” 
Steve MᶜQueen

Marian Goodman Gallery in Paris is proud to announce an exhibition by Steve MᶜQueen to launch the 2016 season. We present Ashes, his latest film installation, as well as several new works produced especially for this, his fifth exhibition at the gallery. Steve MᶜQueen’s latest projects comprise a wall installation formed of 77 dark blue neon lights, each a unique handwritten version of the phrase Remember Me, as well as two sculptural works, Broken Column and Moonlit.

Ashes is an immersive work composed of two films projected simultaneously on either side of a free-hanging screen. First is a portrait of Ashes, a young man from Grenada from where the artist’s family also originated. Cracking a mischievous smile and taunting the camera, Ashes is seated at the prow of a boat sailing the Caribbean Sea. The footage was captured during the production of another work, entitled Caribs’ Leap (2002). Shot live on Super 8 film by the renowned cinematographer Robby Müller, the images illustrate the documentary aspect of MᶜQueen’s work.  The writer Jean Fisher noted that the artist’s use of “the hand-held camera as an integral part of the performance, the transgression of boundaries between the imaginary and the real, between filmic space and viewer’s space, the interruptions of narrative continuity” 1 the culmination of which marks an affinity with cinema-vérité.

Ashes’ carefree demeanor and apparent freedom stand in contrast to the content of the second film projected on the other side of the screen and shot eight years later in a Grenada cemetery, in contrast to the idyllic postcard pictures of the Caribbean island. “Life and death have always lived side by side, in every aspect of life,” said MᶜQueen. “We live with ghosts in our everyday.”

The intensity of the piece is derived from the juxtaposition of the two projections (life and death, boundless space and enclosed space) linked by an off-screen voice. MᶜQueen uses a monologue to pull together the threads of a story that are absent from the images. Employing this narrative device, each viewer is rendered a witness to the drama through the oral testimonies of Ashes’s friends.

For Jean Fisher, MᶜQueen’s works are akin to heterotopias conceptualized by Michel Foucault: a site that is, unlike a utopia, once real and distinct from others places, but with the power to juxtapose several, otherwise incompatible locations. “MᶜQueen’s heterotopias locate us in an uncomfortable place, exposing a necessity for us to think about how we may reimagine and reinhabit the world with greater sensibility…”2

Born in London in 1969, Steve MᶜQueen has said “I discovered filmmaking, and that was it, a eureka moment. I was 19 years old.” In 1993, as he was about to graduate from Goldsmiths, University of London, he showed his first video, Bear, at the Royal College of Art in London. This first video revealed some of the themes that the artist continued to explore in the 1990s such as the relationship of the body to space. His work was recognized in 1999 when he was awarded the Turner Prize.

MᶜQueen’s work has been the subject of many museums around the world, including the National Portrait Gallery in London (2010), the De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art in Tilburg (2009), the Institute of Contemporary Art in London, the Museum of Modern Art in New York (1997). In 2009, he was selected to represent Great Britain at the Venice Biennale. He participated in Documenta X (1997), Documenta XI (2002), and Documenta XII (2007). Most recently, his work was the subject of retrospective exhibitions, at the Art Institute of Chicago (2012) and at the Schaulager in Basel (2014). His last museum exhibition in France was in 2003 at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York will hold a new solo show of his work in spring 2016.

Internationally renowned as a filmmaker, MᶜQueen has directed three feature films: Hunger (2008), Shame (2011), and 12 Years a Slave (2014). He won the “camera d’or” award at the Cannes Film Festival for Hunger and the Oscar for the Best Motion Picture for 12 Years a Slave in 2014.


[1] Jean Fisher, “Intimations of the Real: On Western Deep and Caribs’ Leap”, in Caribs’ Leap / Western Deep, Steve McQueen, 2002
2 Jean Fisher, “On the Space and Place in the Recent Work of Steve McQueen”, in Steve McQueen Works, Schaulager, Laurenz Foundation, 2012

 
press contact:
Raphaële Coutant  raphaele@mariangoodman.com  01 48 04 70 52

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