LONDON.- Marian Goodman Gallery is presenting Christian Boltanskis first solo exhibition in London since 2010. He uses photography, sculpture and film to create large-scale installations that engage with shared preoccupations while being rooted in the artists own history. Conceived as a complete installation, the exhibition includes several substantial new film pieces.
Boltanski leads visitors into this exhibition through a suspended veiled passage coalescing personal and communal memories. Bisecting the ground floor, La Traversée de la vie (The Crossing of Life) revisits images Boltanski worked with for a 1971 piece entitled Album de photos de la Famille D. For this seminal piece, he used photographs from a 1950s family album belonging to one of his friends. While endeavoring to reconstruct it chronologically, he sensed this process didnt reveal anything unique about the family, but rather their ordinariness. In Boltanskis oeuvre, portraiture invariably unearths nameless faces, ghosts of forgotten, untraceable identities. Here, where the photographs have been enlarged and printed onto thin veils that one walks under and through, their delicate, faded images seemingly belong to pasts which can no longer be fully grasped.
Two monumental film installations echo each other on either side of La Traversée de la vie: Animitas (Blanc), made in a bleak snowscape of Ile dOrléans, Quebec in 2017, and Animitas (small souls), created in the remote, extreme conditions in Chiles Atacama Desert and shown in the 2015 Venice Biennale. Their titles are derived from the Latin anima, which translates as soul, and animitas, a Chilean word meaning roadside shrine. Each iteration consists of hundreds of small Japanese bells with Plexiglas tags attached to tall stems planted in the ground. The configuration of the bells in each film, located under different constellations, correlates with the positions of the stars on the artists birth date. This poetic cartography of Boltanskis origins contrasts with the bells chimes, the wind creating gentle eulogies for lost human souls.
Lifes transience is also dwelt on in a new film installation titled Éphémères (Mayflies), 2018. The French word éphémère translates as ephemeral or temporary and Boltanski has documented insects whose very name speaks of their most brutally fleeting lifespans, projecting their luminescent wings across and through a room of torn, suspended veils. DépartArrivée (2015) consists of two signs composed of red and blue bulbs that are a reminder of the abrupt start and end points on the arc of lifes passage, except that here Boltanski begins the exhibition with Départ suspended over its threshold, leaving Arrivée for the upstairs gallery.
Boltanski presents another new work, Misterios (Mysteries), 2017, across the whole of the gallerys upper floor. This video triptych documents a project made on the rocky, uninhabited coast of Bahia Bustamante in Patagonia, for the Biennial of Contemporary Art of South America. Mounted on the shore, three colossal trumpets generate a sound akin to that of whalesong when strong ocean winds pass through them. Boltanski isnt so much interested in imitation as creating something enduring beyond his own life and artistic legacy: Maybe in a hundred years my name will be forgotten, but someone will say there was a man who came here and talked to whales.
Christian Boltanski was born in 1944 in Paris where he lives and works. His most recent exhibitions include NA at Oude Kerk in Amsterdam (on view until 29 April 2018); Anime. Di luogo in luogo at the Museo dArte Moderna di Bologna MAMbo (2017); La Salle des pendus at Macs Grand-Hornu (2016) and Almas at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes in Santiago, Chile (2014).
He is currently preparing several retrospective exhibitions at major institutions such as Power Station of Art in Shanghai (Spring 2018); the Israel Museum in Jerusalem (1 June 31 October, 2018); the National Art Center in Tokyo (2019) and Centre Pompidou in Paris (September 2019).
Boltanski has been the recipient of many prestigious awards, including the Créateurs sans frontières, award for visual arts by Cultures France, in 2007; the Praemium Imperiale, Japan Art Association, in 2006; and the Kaiserring, Mönchehaus Museum Goslar, in 2001.