PARIS.- The show is an ode to transformation in all its facets. Vicerial depicts it in various forms: as an awakening of the material, illustrated by the work in tribute to Pierre Soulages where the beyond-black thread stretched taut on the canvas suddenly flows in waves to the floor; as artistic creation via a process of exploration and experimentation, the process that precedes the nascent work, and as the gestation that is exclusive to viviparous beings.
Silent presences watch the visitor in a room transformed into what could be a private bedroom or holy chapel, draped in black, the lighting subdued. Engrossed in a romantic embrace, in the middle of giving birth or living out their twilight years, they seem to be in the grip of a transition. Like a moment frozen in time, Vicerial attempts to capture the transformation paving the way to the (re)birth of these unclassifiable beings, these supernatural nymphs, half-plant, half-animal.
Our environment abounds in these metamorphoses, she explains. My thread turns into a cocoon right in front of my eyes, and a sculpture emerges from it. Everything undergoes transformation. Alongside them is a wall featuring small sex-votos made from a single, ink-coloured thread. For the first time, the artist has inlaid them with nuggets of bronze and fine gold. The objects-as-offerings beg the question, what exactly do they evoke? Female genitals? Insects? Extraterrestrial bodies? These enigmatic creatures highlight a great taboo of society: the fear of the passing time, of change, of decline, vulnerability and death.
Jeanne Vicerials work has featured in several group exhibitions, including at the Maximiliansforum, Munich (2022), Fondation Martell, Cognac (2022), Ballroom Project, Antwerp (May 2022), Maison Guerlain, Paris (2022), Musée International des Arts Modestes in Sète (2023), Lafayette Anticipations Fondation Galeries Lafayette, Paris (2023), FRAC Auvergne (2023), Musée Bargoin, Clermont-Ferrand (2023) and the Nîmes Triennale (2024).
In 2022, she created the sets for Atys, a new version of the tragic opera composed by Jean-Baptiste Lully and inspired by Ovids Metamorphosis, directed by Angelin Preljocaj and shown for the first time in France at the Versailles Royal Opera.
In 2023, Jeanne Vicerial made the costumes for Figures by Dalila Belaza at the Théâtre de la Cité Internationale.
Jeanne Vicerials first monograph was published in 2023 with a special contribution from philosopher Emanuele Coccia and interview with historian and researcher Ida Soulard.