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Sunday, April 27, 2025 |
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The Ravestijn Gallery opens solo show with Paris based artist Vincent Fournier's series "Brasilia" |
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Vincent Fournier, Brasilia / The Itamaraty Palace - Foreign Relations Ministry, spiral stairs, 2012. C-print on Ilford Fine Art Baryta with no border. Print sizes: 90 x 153 cm and 150 x 255 cm / Edition of 10.
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AMSTERDAM.- Brasília is a city composed of reinforced concrete, a paragon of the tenets of modernist architecture and city planning. Enfolded by the artificial Paranoá Lake, the city fashions a curious structural plane; a grid-like formula of post-war modernism arranged into a light curve. Brasília was constructed in the late 50s from scratch according to the blueprints by the urban planner Lucío Costa, landscape designer Roberto Burle Marx and the architect Oscar Niemeyer. The three designers proposed a set of speculative opportunities for the future of architectural utopia; future, that some sixty years later has lost itself somewhere in the murky water between the past and present. A far cry from the buzzing city streets of Rio and São Paulo, Brasília is a plateau mostly of purpose-built bureaucratic and governmental settings.
The austerity of modernist architecture lends itself to Vincent Fourniers photography series that bear the name of the concrete capital. Here, architect Oscar Niemeyers work constitutes the backdrop for Fourniers retrospect of the grandiose dream of posterity. Fourniers photographs buttress Niemeyers consolidated vision that finds its counterpart from the urbanism of Le Corbusier; a political, as well as a technical project concerned with land use and its implications to transportation and physical activity.
In Fourniers images, Niemeyers formalistic fictions appear like relinquished film sets from Jacques Tatis Playtime. The photographs exist as carefully composed and colored geometrical entities, just like Tatis, as if to remind us about the memory of a lost future. Interestingly, in the contrived landscapes and interiors Fournier delivers, anything human is expressed rather via lack than excess. Throughout the series only a handful of people is positioned in the images.
In Fourniers exterior shot of the Chamber of Deputies, Niemeyers concrete lines and curves appear like an absurdist outtake on governmental functionalism turned into an artistic experiment, more specifically into what appears like a flying saucer. Fourniers image constitutes a language that from the outset seems purely aesthetic but reveals itself to be above all ideological, like all modernist architecture was. Fourniers simple composition is elegant and clever, approaching the utopian object from an angle that provides us an opportunity to access the construction a new. Respectively, Fourniers work highlight the sophistication and precision of Niemeyers practice.
Vincent Fourner (Burkina Faso, 1970) studied sociology and visual arts before maintaining a diploma from the National School of Photography in Arles in 1997. In recent years, his work has been exhibited throughout Europe and Asia. Fourniers photographs from the Brasília series are part of the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum in New York and the LVMH Contemporary Art Foundation in Paris. Space Project, Fourniers previous body of work addressed the scientific and technological utopias echoing in our collective imagination. Images from this series are part of the collections of the MAST Foundation in Bologna and the Schlumberger Collection, Domaine des Etangs.
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