NICE.- In the 1960s, Bernar Venet embarked on an unprecedented radicalisation of the artistic experience and aesthetic production. Deterred by the hackneyed conventions of French art and fascinated by American formalism and, above all, Marcel Duchamp, from 1970 onwards, he emerged as one of the leading figures of conceptual art. For the very first time, the exhibition aims to explore this little-known period of his career, which began in Nice and unfolded in the United States.
Conceptual, sculptural and pictorial, at this point Bernar Venets work was moving towards a reflection on the identity of art and the relationship between artistic expression and scientific knowledge, combining uncertainty, unpredictability and disorder with mathematical data and information theory.
This extremely productive period, during which he incorporated the pure abstraction of scientific research and the objectivity and rationality of mathematics into the field of art, also marked the start of a truly multidisciplinary approach. Stimulated notably by his friendship with the Judson Dance Theaters artists, Bernar Venet actually tackled a project for a ballet, organising performances and conferences, which will all offer pretexts for arranging a program of events associated with various local stakeholders. Alongside the presentation of around a hundred works, numerous archives from the Venet Foundation shed light on the artist's creative process.
The exhibition is envisioned as a diptych: while the Museum of Contemporary Art in Lyon (MAC) is organising a full retrospective of his work, the
Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MAMAC) is offering visitors the opportunity to immerse themselves in this specific and intense period of his work, which enabled Bernar Venet to be recognised as one of the great artists on the international conceptual scene in the 1960s.
By presenting what are usually defined as mathematical objects': numbers, figures, spaces, functions, relationships, structures, etc. an artwork is able to elevate itself to the greatest level of abstraction, which was foreign to it. The 'non-referential' is stretched to its furthest limits. We no longer have symbolism, as in abstract art, nor that of form or colour for example... I offer an optimum self-referential system, which can only be contained in a mathematical equation.
Curated by: Hélène Guenin, Director of the MAMAC, and Alexandre Quoi, Art Historian