The « rêvolutions » project by artist Céleste Boursier-Mougenot, accompanied by exhibition curator Emma Lavigne, which will be presented at the 56th International Art Exhibition – la Biennale di Venezia, will transform the French pavilion into an oneiric and organic Island. The project will be inaugurated during the professionnal preview days from 6th to 8th of May 2015.
rêvolutions : the project
The French pavilion at the Art Biennale 2015 is open to the elements, conjuring up in the Giardini the "follies" of the romantic parks of the 18th century. Now it has become the theatre of an apparition, of an experimental ecosystem that reveals a state of nature unlike any other. Under the skylight stripped of its glass and in its wooded walkways, Céleste Boursier-Mougenot offers the choreographic alchemy of three trees moving in time with their metabolism, variations in their sap flow and their sensitivity to light and shade. Behind these chimeras – these machine/nature hybrids – lies an animist vision of trees. As in Francesco Colonna's enigmatic novel The Dream of Poliphilus and Primo Levi's short story Dysphylaxis, we see trees metamorphosing into transhuman creatures suddenly liberated from their rootedness to the ground. While rekindling the aspiration to the marvellous and the sense of wonder of Italian Mannerist gardens, Céleste Boursier-Mougenot lets his underlying political thrust filter through. His intention here is to commandeer systems used for controlling living beings and their movements and compose a poetic work offering humanity living spaces marked by liberty and unconventional beauty. Surrounded by trees whose electric rustling generates a real-time sound environment based on differential low-voltage current, the French pavilion is transformed into an open-air theatre: a refuge where the visitor can find a place to relax – to float, as it were, on the semicircle of the steps which imitate those of the portico but adapt to the shape of the body – in a harmonious continuum conducive to reverie and reflection.
During the Art Biennale 2015, the exhibition catalogue will be co-edited by the publishing house Analogues and the Institut français.