Vik Muniz – Xippas

Xippas Gallery Paris, France

December 12, 2009 – January 2, 2010

Working with incongruous materials—thread, jam, chocolate syrup, ketchup, dust, toys, pigment, etc—chosen for their relationship to the image that they depict, Vik Muniz reconstructs images taken from art history or the media, images that belong to our visual collective history and that always resemble the memory we have of them. These images are then photographed in order to renounce the origins from which they spring and thus creating an illusory representation: from the best-known 19th century landscapes recreated with thread, to the fetishized images by Warhol recreated in chocolate, from the “Pictures of Dust” made for Vik’s exhibition at the Whitney Museum, to the “Pictures of Color” and the “Pictures of Air” shown at the Venice Biennale, to the images in diamonds and caviar of the series “Diamond Divas” and “Caviar Monsters”… the allusions are varied, the illusions are complete.

For his fifth solo show at the Galerie Xippas, Vik Muniz will present two series of photographs: for the Gordian Puzzles series, Vik has chosen emblematic paintings such as the Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci, the Grande Jatte by Georges Seurat, and the Guernica and Demoiselles d’Avignon by Picasso, that he recomposes with puzzle pieces. Each image is made using several different puzzles printed with the image but cut differently, so while the puzzles remains unsolved, the image is “solved.”

In the Pictures of Paper series, Vik revisits the cultural and emotional relationship our society has with black and white photography. Inspired by the photographs of Brassaï , André Kertész, Robert Frank, Margaret Bourke White, Weegee, Andreas Feinninger, O. Winston Link, Dorthea Lange…, Vik recreates these images with superpositions of paper ranging from black to white and passing through shades of gray. Up close, the resulting effect is somewhat grotesque, but from a few steps back, the images are identical to the originals by which they are inspired.
Through the process of the creation of his images, Vik Muniz plays several roles: mischievous and imbued with irony, he is painter, sculptor, photographer and theoretician all at once.
Vik Muniz’s artworks offer an image that is sensual and ambiguous, but that interrogate the process of visual perception. He encourages doubt, and our ability to look at things and to analyze them: “vision is above all else a form of intelligence and recognition or identification is a comfort of sorts.” Vik’s artworks are comforting in their sense of familiarity, but they allows us to supercede the process of identification.

Vik Muniz was born in São Paulo in 1961. He moved to New York in 1984. His first sculptures are “trompe l’oeils”: a deflated football cast in bronze and painted to look like the real football, or the plastic cast “Clown Skull” fitted out with a round nose as if an object found in an archaeological dig. In 1988, Vik’s book The Best of Life, went missing and he thus began to redraw the images from the book from memory and then photograph them. The issues raised by this series on the nature of looking and the role of photography are intrinsic to Vik’s practice, and if Vik has since constructed a body of work exclusively photographic, he nonetheless plumbs the nature of visual representation.
Numerous international solo-shows have been consecrated to Vik, among them: International Center of Photography, New York (1998) ; Museu de Arte Moderna, São Paulo and the Museu de Art Moderna, Rio de Janeiro (2001) ; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2001) ; the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona (2002) ; The Menil Collection, Houston (2002) ; the Centro Gallego de Arte Contemporanea, Saint-Jacques de Compostelle, Spain(2003) ; the Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Rome (2003) ; the Fundación Telefonica, Madrid (2004) and the Irish Museum of Contemporary Art, Dublin (2004). In 2001, Vik Muniz represented the Brazilian Pavilion in the 49th Venice Biennale.
A retrospective of Vik Muniz’s oeuvre entitled Vik Muniz: Reflex has been traveling to many venues between 2006 and 2009 including: Miami Art Museum, University of South Florida, Seattle Art Museum, PS1,Queens, New York, Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, Museum of Contemporary Art, Montréal, Antiguo Colegio de San Ildefonso, Mexico, MASP, São Paulo, MAM, Rio de Janeiro, Brésil….

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