New monograph. Devilishly mischievous, the title of this publication, “François Morellet, c’est n’importe quoi ? (Does It Make Any Sense?)”, questions us and alerts us to the touch of mischief that animates the artist’s now well-known minimalist vocabulary of white monochromes, black lines, and neon lights all arranged under the auspices of mathematics. This neatly ordered world is actually subject to a generalized tremor of sorts, a kind of earthquake of saving grace.In the series “Triptyque” (2014) and “Carrément bricolé” (Completely Cobbled Together) (2013), the diverse elements of the work give the impression of being broken apart by vibrations. This is the case, too, in “La Débâcle” (The Debacle) (2013), where a large black line divides the painting like a Newmanian zip, almost recalling the sharp edges of Caspar David Friedrich’s “The Sea of Ice”. As for the concentric circles of “Cruibes” (2013-14), they might be the materialization of this shockwave that extends onto a wooden footbridge specially designed by Japanese artist Tadashi Kawamata. This jetty allows us to venture out over an ocean of neon lights whose blinking creates a luminous swell. The undulations of light created by this work, initially designed in 2001 for the Zentrum für Internationale Lichtkunst in Unna (Germany), bring the space to reel and sway in a vibrant tribute to Piet Mondrian’s series of paintings entitled “Pier and Ocean“ (1915).Finally, an exceptional collection of works from 1949, inspired by tribal art, and more specifically by aboriginal art, initially shown in 1950 at the Gallery Raymond Creuze, in Paris, sheds light on its origins, these pieces allow us to appreciate the growth and the eternal, vibrating youth of François Morellet’s work. François Morellet (1926-2016) is considered one of the major figures of geometrical abstraction over thepast half century, a pioneer of minimal art. An internationally recognized artist since the 1970s, he is the creator of many private and public commissions both in France and abroad, such as the permanent installation L’Esprit d’escalier, realized in the Lefuel Staircase of the Musée du Louvre in 2010.His work has been exhibited in many venues, including the Centre Georges Pompidou, the Musée d’Orsay, the Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume, the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Center for Fine Arts in Brussels, the S.M.A.K. in Ghent, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Mamco in Geneva, Documenta in Kassel, the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, the Staatliche Kunsthalle in Baden-Baden, the Museum Ritter in Waldenbuch, Modern Art Oxford, the Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montréal, the Brooklyn Museum in New York, the Mi mi Arts Museum, and the MoMA in New York. Published on the occasion of the eponymous exhibition at kamel mennour gallery, Paris, from March to May 2014.
Georges Adéagbo
Matias Agafonovas
Mohammad AlFaraj
Lucie Antoinette
Neïl Beloufa
Zoé Bernardi
Hicham Berrada
Mohamed Bourouissa
Marie Bovo
Daniel Buren
Eugène Carrière
Valentin Carron
Ymane Chabi-Gara
Jean Degottex
Liam Everett
Sidival Fila
Claire Fontaine
Ryan Gander
Alberto Garcia Alix
Alberto Giacometti
Douglas Gordon
Amine Habki
Dhewadi Hadjab
Petrit Halilaj
Julien Heintz
Camille Henrot
David Hominal
Elizabeth Jaeger
Cameron Jamie
Ann Veronica Janssens
Nina Jayasuriya
Ruoxi Jin
Anish Kapoor
Tadashi Kawamata
Idris Khan
Alicja Kwade
Bertrand Lavier
Nicolas Lebeau
Lee Ufan
Matthew Lutz-Kinoy
Baya
Maryan
Pierre Molinier
François Morellet
Christodoulos Panayiotou
Gina Pane
Philippe Parreno
Adam Pendleton
Judit Reigl
Robin Rhode
Ugo Rondinone
Zineb Sedira
Brooklin A. Soumahoro
Mircea Suciu
Huang Yong Ping
Shen Yuan
Collaboration
Nobuyoshi Araki
Jean Arp
Eugène Atget
Larry Bell
Max Bill
Huguette Caland
Pier Paolo Calzolari
Gaston Chaissac
Christian de Portzamparc
Latifa Echakhch
Dan Flavin
Sam Francis
Jean Dubuffet
François-Xavier Lalanne
Lucio Fontana
René Magritte
Louise Nevelson
pascALEjandro
Martial Raysse
Salvo
Sam Szafran
Simon Hantaï
Frank Stella
Tom Wesselmann
Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita
Zao Wou-Ki
Program
François Morellet
C’est n’importe quoi ? – 1949-2014
€20.00






Books
François Morellet
C’est n’importe quoi ? – 1949-2014
€20.00
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François Morellet
Born in 1916 in Cholet, France
Died in 2016 in Cholet, France
Died in 2016 in Cholet, France
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