PARIS.- A photo taken by Henry Clarke1 in 1967 for Vogue magazine frames the model Benedetta Barzini in an evening dress, perched on the statues of the Villa Pallagonia (Bagheria, Sicily). Although a little uninspired, the photo is reminiscent of certain fantasy films like those of Mario Bava with the romantic charm of a decadent splendour.
This setting, which mixes a poor fantastical decor with luxurious pomp, and echoes his visit of the Villa a few months earlier, appealed to the sensitivity of Armand Jalut, who for his fourth exhibition at the gallery elaborates a new series of paintings. Around which one of those eccentric sculptures, a sort of B-series V é nus dIlle with illusionary accents, jewellery, a Murano glass ashtray and other signs of bourgeois refinery such as a glass of liquor are convened.
Visiting the touristic curiosity known as the Villa Palagonia, also called Villa dei Mostri is like entering the vestiges of a Roger Corman4 production, a baroque version, left abandoned. Its a similar impression to the visit of film studios, where the imagination reconstitutes the possible functions of each object in the voice over, where the smallest vestige conceals an anecdote.
These props are once again raised to the status of artefacts by the artist, put to the service of almost random compositions which, beyond principals of collage and fortuitous combinations, are subjected to a range of cheap special effects (deformation, blurring, cutting out, pattern detachment), a body of gestures sending us back to a subjective point of view (POV) under the influence. By combining or isolating the patterns on the abstract backgrounds with exaggerated chromatic effects, Armand Jalut stratifies the subjects and manipulates the textures.
The elaboration of this new series is a pretext for gathering in the exhibition space the strangeness and the aesthetic values related to antique and bling-bling inspired subjects. The series finds its origin in the artists desire to articulate sensitive connections between sophisticated, researched objects, paragons of the fashion press and the baroque exoticism of a decor which has become obsolete.
The gallery space is thus transformed into stage where the soundtrack composed by Nicolas Dubosc suggests an atmosphere, illustrates a possible scenario, fragments of a story, in which the audience and the works alternate in their roles of actor and extra.
Armand Jalut (b. 1976, lives and works in Paris) has exhibited in various museums and foundations : Les Abattoirs, Musée dart contemporain de Toulouse (2014, solo), Rencontres dart contemporain de Cahors (2012), Perm Contemporary Art Museum, Moscou (2012), « Dynasty », Musée dart Moderne de la Ville de Paris/Palais de Tokyo (2011), Creux de lEnfer, Thiers (2011), Musée de L'Abbaye Sainte-Croix, Les Sables d'Olonne (2009), and Fondation Claudine et Jean-Marc Salomon (2007).
His works are in several collections : Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris / Fonds National d'Art Contemporain, Paris / Fonds Municipal d'Art Contemporain de Paris / Fonds Régional dArt Contemporain Aquitaine / Fonds Municipal d'Art Contemporain de Gennevilliers / Musée de l'Abbaye de Sainte Croix, les Sables d'Olonne / Fondation d'entreprise Colas, Paris.