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Friday, November 8, 2024 |
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Galerie Templon opens an exhibition of works by Jitish Kallat |
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Jitish kallat, Epicycles 3 (detail), 2021-2022, double-sided, multilayer print on 20 LPI lenticular lens, teakwood / impression multicouche recto-verso sur lentille lenticulaire 20 LPI, bois de teck, 226 x 132 x 61 cm, 89 x 52 x 24 in., unique.
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PARIS.- Jitish Kallat returns to Paris with Echo Verse, an ambitious exhibition conceived as a complex system of signs and conjectures linking artistic, historical and scientific references. Widely known for his conceptual and poetic language, Jitish Kallat has altered the tenor of the Beaubourg gallery with a new body of work exploring the passage of time and the notions of transience, evolution or entropy.
Jitish Kallat plays with scale and distance to offer an assembly of sensory and speculative propositions that weaves unexpected links between everyday reality and the cosmos. The exhibition opens with Elicitation # 1 (Terranum Nuncius), a photographic diptych of images drawn from the Golden Record archive dispatched by NASA on the Voyager space missions in 1977. These images - children playing with a miniature globe, a woman tasting an ice cream, a man eating a sandwich - were conceived as a summary of human life as addressed to an extraterrestrial intelligence. These inaugural images of consuming and surveying the planet can be read as an oblique invitation to reflect on the exhibition.
Extending his intimate notebook into an immersive mural-like format, Integer Study (drawing from life) is a repertoire of shapes and numbers that spans the entire gallery. Since the beginning of 2021, the artist has been exploring the planetary present through a daily count of the world population. One encounters 365 drawings, each displaying the algorithmically estimated births and deaths that have occurred up until a specific time each day. With intricate graphite and aquarelle pencil markings and gesso stains, Kallats painterly abstraction contrasts with precise data, forming a triangulation of life by mapping birth, death and time. Echoes of existential questions morph into ecological ones, from reflections on climate and extinction to evolution and decay.
At the center of the exhibition is a new suite of four double sided, multi-scopic photo works Epicycles (2020-21) that have their genesis in the early months of the pandemic. Epicycles interweave familiar markers of change - a fallen stem, a crack in the wall, or an abstraction beneath a chair - with images drawn from the iconic touring exhibition Family of Man, organized at MoMA (New York) by photographer Edward Steichen in 1955. Hundreds of images were sourced for this exhibition from photographers working around the world, seeking a declaration of global solidarity in the decade after World War II. Coalescing these intimate images from his studio with a glimpse of humanity from a distant time and place, Kallat yields a composite portrait of time and transience, ephemerality and expiry. These meticulously produced lenticular images create an illusion of depth and cause images to alternately appear and disappear as one moves in their presence.
Yet another elicitation punctuates as well as annotates the exhibition. Elicitation #2 (Cassiopeia A) is a three-dimensional visualization of a dead stars remains from a stellar explosion that occurred 11,000 light years away. While the star, the youngest known supernova remnant in our Milky Way Galaxy blew up 11,000 years ago, its light reached Earth in the late 1600s. The model is produced from NASAs open-source files modelled from Sptizer Space Telescopes data and can be described as a conceptual prompt within the exhibition rather than as a sculptural artwork. The Elicitations become reflective pauses to think of the complex interlacing of the immediate and the cosmic, the past and present, a recurrent motif in much of Jitish Kallats practice.
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March 21, 2022
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