Guillaume Leblon Explained

Guillaume Leblon (born 1971 in Lille) is a French sculptor and visual artist. He lives and works in New York City.

Life and career

Guillaume Leblon studied at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Lyon, France, from which he received his diploma in 1997. He continued his career through numerous residencies, including at the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten in Amsterdam, the Netherlands (1999–2000) and at the International Studio & Curatorial Program (ISCP) in New York in 2008. Leblon participated in the Sonsbeek exhibition in Arnhem, the Netherlands, in the 2001 edition that was curated by Jan Hoet.[1] In 2011, he was nominated for the Marcel Duchamp Prize.[2]

Artistic work

Guillaume Leblon’s artistic practice is built on a number of integrative processes, incorporating elements of sculpture, performance, sound and film in heterogenous installations of dynamic reflection. Guillaume Leblon’s oeuvre is characterized by the association of physical and sentimental phenomena, exploring the intersection of imposing constructions and the fluidity of their individual elements, paying particular attention to all of the senses. Rejecting the clear definitions of conceptualism in his work, Leblon emphasizes the individual pathos contained in his constructions, engaging not only the physical elements but also motions that they encourage. Finding some influence in the construction and transmission of intimate interactions encouraged by arte povera artists, his work has previously been compared to that of Franz West or Thomas Schütte.[3]

Often producing monumental works that actively interact with the spaces in which they are exhibited, Leblon’s pieces build on their surroundings as they intersect and reconfigure their environment. A number of Leblon’s pieces take this approach, like Raum (2006), a massive white cube constructed from plaster walls that intrudes on the gallery in which it is exposed and effectively directs the movement of the visitor.[4] The piece National Monument (2006–2014) is another excellent example of this practice – a tremendous gray cube of fresh clay held together with sections of white fabric reminiscent of bandages, the installation is placed straddling two rooms of an exhibition space. Bisecting and simultaneously redefining the spaces of galleries and museums in which the installation is shown, such pieces confront two- and three-dimensional vectors in temporal and spatial capacities, inhabiting and redefining their surroundings.[5] The imposing installation engages the viewer not only through controlling their movements, but also by captivating all of the senses. Kept malleable by a steady stream of water pouring over the clay, the act that interjects a fluidity and life to a seemingly solid construction also fills the exhibition space with a characteristic smell that engages the senses of the viewer.[6] A similar imposition in the spaces of exhibition can be found in the piece Faces contre terre (2010), in which in various elements of discarded furniture cover the floor of the room in which they are placed. Arranged in a non-hierarchical manner, blocking the way and forcing the viewer to actively interact with the work through walking on it. (in focus) The combination of striking, the imposition of shapes through manipulating the exhibition and guiding the viewer is therefore central to his practice.

Since 2009, Leblon has been engaging with sculptures assembled from assorted elements heterogenous in provenance and time, creating structures that unite external elements in one time and space within the artist’s atelier.[7] The shifting and detached nature of Leblon’s work is visualized through this mise-en-scene, creating tensions between the different states of the elements of his pieces. Working at times with 16mm film, Leblon follows movement that crosses architectural and natural spaces, invading their environments through active interjection. The looped film Villa Cavrois (2000) is an example of this practice, exploring a decaying villa together with the viewer, revealing and concealing rooms and locations in an unexpected journey.[8] Similarly, Leblon explores the relationship between the artist, the viewer and the landscape they inhabit in Temps Libre (2001), a film showing him jumping from a third-story building into the abyss below during the Sonbeek exhibition in Arnhem in 2001.[9]

Exhibitions

Selected solo exhibitions

Selected group exhibitions

Projects

Screenings

Notes and References

  1. Book: Leblon, Guillaume, 1971–. Guillaume Leblon : parallel walk. 2008. Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea. Olveira, Manuel., Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea.. 9782913994317. Santiago de Compostela. 611379347.
  2. Web site: Biography Guillaume Leblon . Galerie Jocelyn Wolff . 16 May 2019.
  3. Michelon . Olivier . Guillaume Leblon – Sculpteur d'espaces . Beaux Arts Magazine . February 2008 . 90–91.
  4. Lorch . Catrin . Guillaume Leblon . Frieze . January–February 2007 . 182.
  5. Verhagen . Erik . Retour à l'AIC . Artpress . September 2014 . 414 . 52–56.
  6. Web site: Tagliafierro . Marco . Guillaume Leblon . Artforum .
  7. Web site: Fedeli . Elisa . Interviews – Guillaume Leblon . Paris Art . 30 September 2011.
  8. Lorch . Catrin . Guillaume Leblon . Frieze . January–February 2007 . 182.
  9. Web site: Fedeli . Elisa . Interviews – Guillaume Leblon . Paris Art . 30 September 2011.