Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The Light Fantastic

I was looking up artists who use electricity and light in their works when I came across Pierre Huyghe. He's a french artist who explores some pretty complex ideas through a range of mediums, from video and digital graphics to photography and installation. A 2006 exhibition called Celebration Park was entirely white, with moving doors and words spelled out in fluorescent white light. He was playing with the ideas of a door being a threshold, by constantly changing their position within the space the "inside" and "outside" ceased to exist. (all images from PBS)




The Journey That Wasn't is a film by Huyghe based on going to Antarctica to search for a mythical albino penguin. It's about mental, physical and philosophical journeys. Did he really go to Antarctica with a group of artists and get stuck in the ice? or it is staged? It doesn't matter because the point is questioning, learning and creating.




Finally, this is one of my favourite stills from his films because it is serene and completely odd at the same time. Huyghe found a town under construction near New York, to be called Streamside. Everyone there came from somewhere else and there was no history to the town yet. So he organised "Streamside Day", complete with parades and speeches, creating a hyper-reality based on fact but a complete work of fiction.



It's pretty difficult to try and summarise his work into one post- so if you're interested in these ideas have a look at the Art 21 site, they have a decent bio and slideshows of his work with more in-depth explanations.

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