'I live a journey of a thousand years' the Currier premieres French artist Raphaël Barontini

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, May 15, 2024


'I live a journey of a thousand years' the Currier premieres French artist Raphaël Barontini
Raphaël Barontini, Marie-Catherine Laveau, 2024. Acrylic, inks, silkscreen, and glitter on canvas. 170 x 140 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Mariane Ibrahim.



MANCHESTER, NH.- The Currier Museum of Art is opening I live a journey of a thousand years, a new exhibition of the work of French artist Raphaël Barontini opening on March 7, 2024.

The exhibition comprises about twenty works and is Barontini’s largest presentation to date at a US institution. Closely following the commission entitled We Could be Heroes at the Panthéon in Paris – part of the Carte blanche series organized by France’s National Monuments Center – the exhibition at the Currier features La Bataille de Vertières (2023) as its centerpiece, a monumental 65-foot-wide painting that first premiered inside the Panthéon and will be on view in the US for the first time. The work is complemented by recent work from US private collections and several new pieces created specifically for the Currier Museum.

The opening event will feature classical guitar music in the Winter Garden Café, followed by curator and artist-led tours and remarks from the artist. If unable to attend the opening, two members-only tours led by the artist have been planned for March 8, at 11 am and 2 pm. Registration is required.

'I live a journey of the thousand years'

The title paraphrases a passage from the poem Calendrier lagunaire, published in 1982 by the late Martinican author and politician Aimé Césaire, which reads: “I dwell in a thousand-year journey.” This is a journey that Barontini feels he is living, alongside those whose life experiences result from uprooting and displacement, and whose identities have been forged by encounters with other cultures through processes of creolization. These processes were described by Martinique-born French philosopher Édouard Glissant as a complex entanglement of different cultures forced into cohabitation, as in the case of the Antilles and other countries in the Caribbean.

Barontini’s mother hails from the French West Indies, and so he is himself the product of such entanglement, which is further complicated by his European heritage. His work is an endless journey of self-discovery and historical excavation. Suspended between multiple fractured identities, Barontini continuously attempts to blur these lines – culturally, geopolitically, and historically. His work often surfaces the silenced stories of militants and freedom fighters, whom he celebrates as heroes mimicking and infiltrating the Western art canon and its representational and ceremonial modalities.

“I work daily with history and its past visual manifestations,” says Barontini. “These materials provide me with a framework. My practice is centered on storytelling and opening a dialogical space for interrogating our past […] The era of the triangular trade has interested me for a long time, because it is a pivotal moment in history. Its impact on the geopolitical, economic, and cultural relations between Europe, Africa, and the Americas persists. This painful historical juncture is also the breeding ground for an exceptional creolized culture, which turned the arts upside down. My work addresses these issues – but is primarily concerned with imagination.”

The resulting imagery combines diverse references in a visual collage that perfectly exemplifies Glissant’s definition of the term “creole”: a cultural hybrid that is a blending of different cultural, linguistic, and social elements in a region. Similarly, Barontini’s work combines multiple references, resulting in images that are both familiar and arrestingly novel. His mixed-media technique and practice are equally layered and complex.

Raphaël Barontini was born in 1984 in Saint-Denis, France, where he still lives and works. Barontini’s combination of photography, silkscreen printing, painting, and digital printing results in a style of painting in movement that offers a new perspective on history, whilst simultaneously asking questions about the very status of painting in a museum or public space.

His work has been exhibited in institutions all over the world, including MAC VAL (Vitry-sur-Seine, France), MO.CO (Montpellier, France), the Museum of African
Diaspora (San Francisco), New Art Exchange (Nottingham, UK), and the Museum of Arts and Design (New York). He has also taken part in the international biennials in
Bamako (Mali), Casablanca (Morocco), Lima (Peru), and Thessaloniki (Greece). He will soon be the artist-in-residence at Villa Albertine in New Orleans.

Currier Museum of Art
Raphaël Barontini: 'I live a journey of a thousand years'
March 7th – June 23rd, 2024
Exhibition curator: Lorenzo Fusi, Chief Curator










Today's News

March 7, 2024

With a new Holocaust museum, the Netherlands faces its past

80-years worth of Work by Teruko Yokoi at Marlborough Gallery

Opening reception with Mel Kendrick today at David Nolan Gallery upon opening of 'Cutting Corners'

NYU's Grey Art Gallery moves into new home renamed Grey Art Museum

Fondazione Prada presents 'Miranda July: New Society' at the Osservatorio

Gagosian to present the first exhibition to focus exclusively on Jean-Michel Basquiat's time in LA

Vast panorama of more than seventy works by Teresa Lanceta now showing at Musee d'art moderne de Céret

Woodbury House presents 'The Lost Archive of Andy Warhol' by William John Kennedy

Activating contrasting visual echoes, Jones's tonal progressions create alternating moments of dissonance and harmony

Immersive works by Turner prize winning Scottish artist Martin Boyce at Fruitmarket's 50th year programme

New York-based artist Matthew Ronay's 'Sac, Cyst, Satchel' now on view at Casey Kaplan

"The language of the conscious mind is text, and the language of the unconscious mind is image"

'I live a journey of a thousand years' the Currier premieres French artist Raphaël Barontini

'Domestic Memory: Manny Farber and Patricia Patterson' opened last week at Quint Gallery in La Jolla

Title of exhibition by Merike Estna drawn from 20th-century French novelist René Daumal's 'Mount Analogue'

Recent work by French artist Stéphane Villafane, on view during the month of March

Coral Woodbury's 'Revised Edition' draws women back into the history of art

'Nicole Coson: In Passing', featuring all new works, marks first gallery solo show in the United States

Figurative painter recognized for her melancholic, big-eared, and doe-eyed figures, Jess Valice, at Almine Rech

Artspace welcomes new Chair Peter Wilson

First solo show in the U.K of acclaimed Polish photographer Kacper Kowalski soon to end

Robby Müller's 'Polaroids' having opening reception today at Galerie Marian Goodman in Paris

Jack Shainman Gallery presents 'Gordon Parks: Born Black'

Alluring and enigmatic women's lips and mouths depicted by Marilyn Minter at Lehmann Maupin

Garage Doors with Man Doors: Enhancing Functionality

Forward-Thinking in Law Enforcement Safety Equipment

Expert Legal Help for Navigating Parking Lot Accident Claims

Jiaxin Zhang: The Creative Force Behind New York Fashion Week, Shaping the Future Direction of the Fashion Industry




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful