PARIS.- Isabelle Hayeur is participating in the upcoming group exhibition "Contrast and Indifference" at the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris, where she presents a selection of documentary photographs created between 2012 and 2024. These works reflect her long-standing engagement with issues of environmental transformation, urban development, and the social dynamics that shape our landscapes. Hayeurs art practice explores the relations between nature and the built environment, focusing on the conflicts and tensions that emerge within these shifting territories.
The artists brought together in the exhibition "Contrast and Indifference" travel the world, constantly confronting foreign contexts into which they allow themselves to enter, gently and attentively, and bear witness to what happens there. Travel is essential to their approach, as is a form of solitude conducive to observation and encounters. Guided by a critical awareness and a sensitivity to others, they reveal some of the staggering disproportions affecting humanity here and there on our planet. Avoiding the spectacular, by constantly connecting surface issues and deeper ones, they recount the tensions of the contemporary world. This two-part exhibition, co-produced by the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris and the Grantham Foundation for Art and the Environment in Québec.
Curator: Catherine Bédard
Isabelle Hayeur's works have been exhibited at the National Gallery of Canada, the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, the Neuer Berliner Kunstverein in Berlin, the Musée dart contemporain de Montréal, the Canadian Cultural Centre in Paris, the Tampa Museum of Art, the Bruce Silverstein Gallery in New York, the Casino Luxembourg Forum dart contemporain, the Today Art Museum in Beijing, and the Rencontres internationales de la photographie in Arles. She has also participated in numerous artists residencies, including at the Rauschenberg Residency, the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology, the Studios of Key West, the International Studio & Curatorial Program, A Studio in the Woods / Tulane University, the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, and the Wall House #2 Groninger Museum, among others.