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Thursday, October 16, 2025 |
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Three exhibitions explore political contradictions, play, and transience at Frac Lorraine |
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Hamishi Farah, Untitled (Loths Wife), 2025. Photo: Stefan Korte. Courtesy of the artist, Arcadia Missa, London and Maxwell Graham, New York.
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METZ.- Farah's practice materialises the political, representative and philosophical contradictions that underpin contemporary artistic production. In this exhibition, the displayed works range from landscape paintings to portraits, associated to religious sculptures from the musée de La Cour dOr collections in Metz. Their juxtaposition reveals a genealogy linking morality, power, and punishment.
Farah focuses for his exhibition on the position of the witness, embodied here in paintings depicting pillars of salt located near the Dead Sea. Known as Lots wife, these formations refer to a biblical story: as she was fleeing from her city of Sodom with her family, she looked back one last time to witness its destructionand, as punishment, was transformed into a pillar of salt. Hamishi Farah underlines that in giving a human face to natural features a resonance is established between culture and nature, in the process naturalising history.
His exhibition juxtaposes the suffering of religious images with affects such as disgust, shame, guilt, or indifference, urging us to reckon with the contradictions that surround us. Farah indirectly addresses the issue of censorship and its double: self-censorship, as practised by cultural institutions and the media. Such inability to name reveals how the affirmation of a differenceperceived as a threat to the status quocan quickly reach a tipping point. In such moments, language can no longer achieve consensus and the instruments of social cohesionpunishment and recognitionlose their power, making other ways of speaking and showing necessary.
Takako Saito, It's All Play
The exhibition presents a significant collection of recently acquired works, alongside works lent by private lenders and the artist herself. The selection outlines the contours of a prolific practice centred on craftsmanship, experimentation, and discovery both sensory and playful. Theres a serial logic at the heart of Saito's workthe reflection of a wish to explore, not to accumulate. Her art is deeply social and warm; every gesture counts and the audience is central. Her drawings invite to read aloud, to act, to interact. This generosity reflects a deep trust in the visitor, who is invited to become a co-actor of the work.
Born in Japan in 1929, Takako Saito has been close to the Fluxus movement, yet developing a unique approach based on interactionan interest which can perhaps be traced to her early training in child psychology. This acquisition consolidates the historical feminist focus of the Frac's collection.
Degrés Est: Elise Grenois
Elise Grenois is interested in forms in transition: forms that take shape between the exhibition space and the studio, forms in which gesture and matter meet. Her practice is based on an experimental approach to the materials she lovesparaffin, bronze, porcelain, crystal, and glass. With her project for Frac Lorraine, Elise Grenois questions the effect of time on form; the resulting sculpture is a play with transience. Working along a non-linear time, made up of repeating gestures, melted memories, and the acceptance of instability, Elise Grenois allows time to spread, to permeate formuntil dissolution itself.
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Today's News
October 16, 2025
SPEEDWELL announces new limited-edition art book The Haunted-Contemporary Photography Conjured in New England
New exhibition 'Discovering Ancient Egypt' opens at Dutch National Museum of Antiquities
Bertoia's ushers in "the most wonderful time of the year" with a festive Nov. 21-22 auction of toys & holiday antiques
Shannon's announces Fall Fine Art Auction on Thursday, October 30th
Nicolas Party uses pastel to meditate on aging, renewal, and the flow of time
Veronica Ryan's Black Sun installation returns alongside new works at Paula Cooper Gallery
Exhibition at Kunstfoyer presents Polaroids by Helmut Newton
EMMA unveils final phase of Saastamoinen Collection with 40+ new international works
A Good Shelf: Tom Sachs blends ceramics, bricolage, and ritual in interactive London exhibition
Markus Schinwald blends Giotto, AI, and science fiction in Salzburg exhibition
Sleeping on the job: Elmgreen & Dragset install hyperrealistic, slumped gallery assistant in Paris window
Three exhibitions explore political contradictions, play, and transience at Frac Lorraine
KOLUMBA presents make the secrets productive! - Art in Times of Unreason
Gropius Bau presents Ligia Lewis's expansive survey of race, history, and resistance
Patty Horing's new paintings explore modern detachment and emotional nuance
Bagus Pandega, Mona Filleul and Costanza Candeloro with Licit Illicit Bookshop at Swiss Institute
Cornelia Foss reveals personal trauma in Little Reds series at Hirschl & Adler
Gooding Christie's makes strong European advance with key personnel ahead of Rétromobile Paris sale
Exhibition at Galerie John Ferrère explores mud as the matrix where Paris history and modern ruins converge
Laurent Grasso merges myth and machine in debut London solo show at Perrotin
Diriyah Contemporary Art Biennale 2026 title, theme, and preliminary artist list
Marie Watt explores Indigenous systems for measuring time at Marc Straus
kaufmann repetto announces representation of Bice Lazzari
Desert Caballeros Western Museum acquires monumental bronze by John Coleman
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