NEW YORK, NY.- Andrew Kreps Gallery announced the representation of Julien Creuzet (b. 1986, Blanc-Mesnil, France.)
Creuzet's first solo exhibition in New York, flapping feathers our hands our wings glimmer to dance the orange sky, is on view through October 29 at the gallery's 394 Broadway location.
Both skeletal and architectural, Julien Creuzets materially dense sculptures weave together his own lived experience with the broader, social reality of the Caribbean Diaspora, which is the result of shared history but simultaneously, has produced a multitude of outcomes. Abstract in appearance, the works metal armatures are drawn from maps, topographies, and an array of other images. The resulting forms slowly accrue media, found and new plastics in kaleidoscopic color, detritus, torn fabric, varying textures, and the vestiges of Creuzets own touch, creating an accumulation of material that feels like the aftermath of moving through time and place. In dialogue with Creuzets writing practice, the titles of his sculptures are excerpted from his own poetry and function as a point of entry, connecting the tangible, historical references within the work with the concerns of the present. Resisting a finite narrative, and remaining open-ended, Creuzets sculptures are embedded with the anxieties of impending climate crises, the question of emancipation, and a desire for Black affirmation.
Julien Creuzet is a French-Caribbean artist who lives and works in Paris. His work is currently the subject of a solo exhibition at the LUMA Foundation, Arles, titled Orpheus was musing upon braised words, under the light rain of a blazing fog, snakes are deaf and dumb anyway, oblivion buried in the depths of insomnia. Past solo exhibitions include Camden Arts Centre, 2021, CAN Centre dart Neuchâtel, Switzerland, 2019, Palais De Tokyo, 2019, and Fondation Ricard, Paris, 2018. Creuzet has additionally participated in numerous group exhibitions, including Manifesta 13, Marseille, 2020, In 2021, Creuzet was nominated for the Prix Marcel Duchamp, and in 2019 was the recipient of the Camden Arts Centre prize at Frieze London.