BRUSSELS.- Franco-Tunisian artist Ismaïl Bahri presents a solo exhibition as part of the Poésie balistique (Ballistic Poetry) season, launched by curator Guillaume Désanges in 2016 at La Verrière, the Brussels art space of the
Fondation dentreprise Hermès.
Precise and Impalpable in Equal Measure
‟Since the late 2000s, Franco-tunisian artist Ismaïl Bahri has developed a body of work based on minimal situations and gestures whose inexorable logic ultimately generates a kind of magic, a state of grace captured in the essence of his materials. Balling and smoothing out the pages of magazines, until the ink has transferred completely from the paper to the hands, gradually obliterating the printed image ¹. stretching an invisible thread, materialised only by the droplets running along its length, which gradually form a puddle of water in the exhibition space ². Filming a clear droplet of water on a wrist, its barely perceptible tremors revealing the pulse of the arteries beneath the skin ³. a white screen divided by a trembling, vertical black line that gradually reveals itself as a ball of thread being unrolled against a backdrop of snow ⁴. a journey through an urban landscape, represented by its reflection filmed in a glass of ink ⁵, or the white of a piece of paper placed in front the camera lens ⁶. gestures that pay heightened attention to fine detail, and to the accidents and minute variations generated by unplanned events in the real world. In his work as a whole, and in the detail of individual pieces, Ismaïl Bahris practice enacts a gradual process of insistent investigation and revelation of his motifs, based on elementary experimental conditions; formal resolutions over time, based on the principle of photographic development. emulsion, capillarisation, unravelling, denuding: often, very little stands between the works subtle materiality, and its complete disappearance. But the radical simplicity of Bahris protocols emanates quiet, underlying emotion, too: a mixture of surprise and anxiety a clue, perhaps, to the hidden agenda of his work.
Invited by la Verrière to present his first solo exhibition in Belgium, Ismaïl Bahri has devised an ambitious project that transforms the architectural space into a kind of optical instrument, interacting with the play of light and shade, discovery and concealment, as revealed in the buildings interior, or entering from outside. the aim is to exploit la Verrières essential energy chiefly, its light while at the same time concealing its source. the installation combines two kinds of projected imagery: digital, and natural. projections of forms, objects and drawings, but also shafts of natural light, accompany videos screened on an overhead projector. the environment brings together recent works, including some created for the installation, drawing on observations and experiments centred around storms, wind and chaos disruptive natural states that ultimately form fleeting, variously ordered visions.
Ismaïl Bahris work is presented as part of the current poésie balistique season at la Verrière, examining the disconnect between the defining programme of specific works of art, and their impact or effect in other words, between intention and intuition or perception in certain programmatic, conceptual artistic practices. Bahris work seems to me to go to the heart of these issues, and to apply them in his own, unique way. as such, based on arbitrary but rigorously applied protocols, Bahris work springs from an initial, intuitive experiment conducted by the artist over an extended time-frame and in a circumscribed space, with no fixed horizon, which is another way of saying that the experiment is conducted with no specific intent or projected outcome as to the form(s) that may result. through this subtle interplay of unpredictability and control, the artist delegates his creative authority to chance, or the wind, to fortuitous encounters or the prevailing light, in other words to contingent situations that are created more or less blind. In the context of this implacable logic of chance, control resides solely in a fierce refusal to fix or freeze the works inherent possibilities. at the same time, the forces at play are focussed on preserving the viewers passivity. paradoxical? Ismaïl Bahris art is a rare homage to the invisible energy of the static intercessor. the tensions at work within each piece are the source of its fragility and power alike: two manifestations of the same sustained attentiveness to the world of materials and things, through clearly defined, evident forms which, in this context, we might call poetry. direct, raw poetry, of almost transparent clarity, but notable for its refusal to signify. In effect, the work remains open to endless appropriation and interpretation: a kind of non-negotiable polysemy. But in its determination to eliminate facile external references, and to assert its distance from any readily identifiable geographical, cultural or political context, it nonetheless resonates with much of the trouble and tumult in this world. the forms which are gradually made manifest to our senses and intellect are precise and impalpable in equal measure.
Ismaïl Bahri was born in tunis in 1978. he lives and works in paris and tunis.
placing a sheet of paper that flaps in the wind, in front of his camera lens; slowing the fall of water droplets by having them slide down a thread; observing the reflected image of a city in a glass of ink held in your hand as you walk Ismaïl Bahri performs elementary, empirical gestures, paying attention to what happens, and to what these operations cause him to do. Bahri positions himself as an observer: he feels his way, talks about myopia in the context of his work. then, he installs what he calls a capture device for these gestures, often using video, but also photography and sound. he prefers not to specialise. Often, meaning emerges in our peripheral vision, in the indicative presence of the surrounding world as it breaks the surface and reveals itself. *
Ismaïl Bahris work has been shown in diverse venues, including la criée centre dart contemporain (rennes), les églises (chelles), the staatliche Kunsthalle (Karlsruhe), Kunst Im tunnel (düsseldorf), the British Film Institute (london) or the calouste gulbenkian Foundation (lisbon). his films have been selected for festivals such as tIFF (toronto), nYFF (new York), IFFr (rotterdam), FId (marseille) and the Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Brussels). his video work was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Jeu de paume, paris, throughout summer 2017.
* François piron