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Friday, November 15, 2024 |
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Galerie Jeanne Bucher Jaeger announces 'Evi Keller: Origins' |
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Installation view. © Evi Keller, Courtesy Jeanne Bucher Jaeger, Paris-Lisbon.
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PARIS.- The gallery will present the third solo exhibition of Evi Keller.
German artist Evi Keller was born in 1968 in Bad Kissingen. She lives and works in Paris. From 1989 to 1993, she studied art history at the Ludwig Maximilian University as well as photography and graphic design at the Academy of Photography, both in Munich.
Her artistic approach questions the cosmic principle of the transformation of matter by light. bringing together its complexity under the term Matière-Lumière. Matière-Lumière is the only title that Evi Keller has given to her creations over the past 20 years.
The fact that all life on earth is imbued with solar energy inspired the artist with a vision that unites the earth and the sun, leading them to evolve in a perpetual becoming over time. It was essential for her to draw on this awareness and find a new artistic form to embody the sun and its constant interaction with us and ultimately, beyond its symbolism, to embody light in its physical and spiritual dimensions. Through her creations, the artist wants to materialize this light, to
preserve it, to heighten it and, above all, to transmit this cosmic force, the energy of the celestial fire. Matière-Lumière is the incarnation of the journey of becoming aware of the power of light, not of external light, but of the revolution of an inner light of which the sun is the mirror, in order to take root in a cosmic existence and become a co-creator of a universal process, says the artist.
In 2023, Evi Keller received both the first prize of the Prix Carta Bianca and the 100 Women of Culture Award. In the same year, she designed the sets for Purcells opera Dido and Aeneas in collaboration with choreographer Blanca Li and Les Arts Florissants, conducted by William Christie (performances were held at the Teatros del Canal in Madrid, the Théâtre Impérial-Opéra in Compiègne, the Opéra Royal in Versailles and the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona). As part of the Saison dArt 2022, the Domaine de Chaumont-sur-Loire, Centre dArts et de Nature exhibited one of her major video works, [Towards the Light - Silent Transformations], which the gallery sold to the collections of the Maison Européenne de la photographie, as well as a monumental Matière-Lumière.
Origins. Why did you choose this title for your exhibition?
The word origins, which is extremely polysemous, has been used many times and is present in all human intellectual activities... But for me, the title Origins was an obvious choice.
Of course, the title refers first and foremost to the nature of my work, and in particular to the metaphor of the sun, the origin of the world, buried for millions of years, reanimated and transfigured into a work of art by my Matière Lumière voyage. The alchemy of the works embodies an original moment, a return to the source that reveals things specific to each being.
But Origins also and above all reflects what emerges in the consciousness of the viewer who discovers my work. This title came to me after hearing many testimonies from people with whom I shared my Matière-Lumière creation. Its this idea of returning to the source, to our origins, that these people often feel and confide in me when they encounter the work.
Its a manifesto, secret, intimate and personal.
And what do they say? Sometimes they say little, sometimes more... Some, while looking at the work, go so far as to say that they feel projected elsewhere, into a present moment where we cannot locate time or space. Its the light that interacts with Matière-Lumière: beyond the creation of a multiple matter, it gives access to immateriality. Its an intimate experience that can help us accept, or at least become aware of, the universal process of transformation of which we are a part.
I was deeply moved by Olivier Schefers reaction to my work: There are works that are rare, painfully beautiful, that create a world above all aesthetic and formal considerations. They challenge our theoretical and historical divisions. In their presence, we dont ask, Is it beautiful? Is it new? but rather, Where are we? When are we? Theres something here that unsettles our aesthetic habits and our comfort as viewers.
Where are we? When are we? and, I would add, What are we seeing? convey the intimacy of encountering the work in a present moment, timeless and original, that brings us back to the fundamental question of the origin of the universe.
Approaching my work shapes our personal space-time, organically connecting it to the history of the universe. Ultimately, its our awareness of the work that leads us to the next stage of our journey...
What new work have you been created for this exhibition?
The materiality of my new work has evolved. Ive noticed that the marks or imprints that are characteristic of my work have become more intense, deeper (hollowed out), and almost rooted...
They are teeming with primitive lines and shapes whose eternal processes of transformation animate ultra-condensed energy fields, worlds of explosions, implosions, home to entire galaxies.
Primordial forms and structures emerge, opening up an infinite range of possibilities and allowing us to experience the meaning and protean, multiple dimensions of the exhibition Origins. Questioning the beginning but which beginning?
A large part of my new creations is strongly inhabited by primary colors, and especially by a deep blue... its not so much the blue of the oceans, but rather the blue of a cosmic glow, a luminescence, a blue incandescence. Its the blue of fiery suns in the starry skies of night, where creation begins anew at every moment...
These are the mystical imprints of planetary and solar reliefs, of fire, of blue ash, of blue gold, that connect us to the first seconds of the universe.
A myriad of small organic beings, exiles, builders and bearers of life, stories and memories... appearing, disappearing, reappearing...
From geological genesis to prehistoric caves, these are ruins from another time, exotic landscapes and mystical places, an exploration out of time and space into the depths of infinite origins, of memory and the divine, of the material and the immaterial, of the sensitive and the invisible...
These are creations that transport us, that take us to the origin of origins.
Is it a universal cosmogony or one that is specific to each of us? Or it is proof of an approach to the invisible that constitutes all matter, including ourselves?
What route would you suggest visitors take through the gallery for this exhibition?
I wouldnt suggest a specific route, but I would advise visitors to take the time to approach each work and listen to what the light wants to reveal to them at the moment of their encounter.
The first room is devoted to blue cosmogonies, imprints of planetary reliefs, blue stars, blue fire, ashes, blue...
The other rooms will bring us closer to our world, on and in the bowels of the earth... where spirits appear... stories of distant worlds are told, battles are fought, lost civilizations are reborn... These are often ancestral, knightly worlds, populated by hermits and prophets.
The works are to be discovered from afar but above all, as close as possible to the changing materials and spirits that inhabit them. In fact, it is the light emanating from each work that should inspire and give rhythm to the rest of the journey, which will be unique for each visitor.
Excerpt from an interview with Evi Keller, June 2024
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