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This foreword is not the scafolding
of a theorical precept, but is the explanation of my path in order
for me to introduce you to all the aspects of the Wild Exhibition
(with a concern for simplicity, but not for simplification).
The PC democratisation is an incontestable social mutation, which
is sometimes inescapable. It is the same for artists. They are
often marginalized from the system. I therefore purchased a computer
with a similar spirit, full of benevolent curiosity and unspeakable
pressure. I thus completed the varied ranges of my tools I had
acquired along the way.
I already called the computer "a work tool " since the
world already labelled it so, and I gave it some space in my workshop.
I was ready to use it.
The complex technics of my computer, his broad potential and its
immaterial information management troubled the builder craftsman
in me. Facing these issues, I then opened my Encyclopædia
Universalis, a quaint 1976 edition, and started reading the tool
definition.
During my first reading, I was moved by the poetic aspect of the
text. Each word echoed as an invitation to discover more definitions.
Then, a float of images and daily events came and involuntarily
jumble together. It was just as if they wanted to verify the exactness
of the ideas developped by the definition of the tools.
A strong idea came up during the next readings: the use of the
tool is depending on the user. If the tool is a mean to transform
nature, as suggested by the definition, one has to decide about
its orienttion. It was the same for me.
I started to explore the multiple and various facettes of my computer,
slowly and laboriously. As stated by the definition from my Encyclopædia,
" the mechanization way added the alienation of knowledge
to the alienation of work.". I eventually discovered that
I was using the " same tools " as the old ones used
in the past, such as a saw to cut, to glue to open or to superimpose,
but here, by using an immaterial source where the painter's repentence
is infinite and invisible.
It is the very same idea as this source " without any materiality
", without any support, paradoxally, became soon the most
exciting perspective of my tool. In fact, without the obligation
to accomplish a frustrating and degrading metamorphosis of the
work, as it could be for a painting vis à vis a photography
of the same painting. It became easy to change the presentation,
the size, the definition, without thinking that one of the version
was the original, and the other was the copy of the work. The
multiplication and the diversification of the presentation would
then allow me to change the accessibility of my work, to amplify
its encounter, and the circumstances of the encounter.
So Marcel Duchamp brought along art places a common object, his
urinal, as an ironical emissary from the outsideworld. Since he
presented it lying, he tried to change people from the art world's
point of view, in order for them to focalize on the world. So
Robert Fillou stated that " art is what makes life more interesting
than art ", it was still true that the existence of an "
original " work of art would not allow a printout. With this
new tool, I had no more reason to regard art places as the exclusive
element of encounter and existence of my work.
This is when the concept of Wild Exhibition took place. It was
a crossing point, and a meeting point of various interests, including
everything uncertain involved in a meeting.
I felt like taking advantage of the potential that my new tool
was offering me, such as getting closer to you, without degrading
the work, but simply by multipling it and diversifying its presentation
mode, therefore diversifying its localisation.
I felt like talking to you my way about this definition of the
tools, because of its poetic and philosophical importance. It
is standing at the heart of the creative process.
It is true that what seems to differentiate a house painter from
a painter (artist) is the way that each of them looks at his tools,
sincer both of them are using the same tools.
At last, because this definition highlights the acknowledgement
of dysfunction of our society, we are the actors.
Wild Exhibition is a series of 12 multisupport images, each confronting
a tool and a " collective " photography, a press photo
together with an excerpt of this definition.
Today this work exists in diverse forms:
In the shape of twelve printed images which have been exhibited
and distributed all along year 1988, not only in non artistic
locations such as public places, or postal mailing, but also in
art places, via Gallery Donguy, Paris, France.
The exhibition mode and the choice of the presentation place contribute
to a significant complement to the general meaning of the images.
Regarding the postal mailings, they were sent to more than a hundred
persons every month during the whole duration of the exhibition.
Wild Exhibition is also in the shape of a luminescent light and
a sound file on the communication net, the Internet.The guest
is able to reproduce these images by using his personal printer
as a reproduction " workshop ".
Wild Exhibition exists also in the shape of animated images compiled
in the CD-Rom. It is much more than a report of 12 exhibitions
outside of an artistic context which is here presented to you..
As quoted in the definition " by metaphorical extension,
one can call " tool " all means of thoughts ".
The CD-Rom allows you via Internet to download a printable piece
in a post card format, in order to continue the principle of Wild
Exhibition at home and according to your own feelings. Moreover,
this CD-Rom gives you the opportunity to visit other spaces, other
artists.
What is more elementary for an artist than diverting the objects
from their original function in order to reveal their poetic faces
and transform our everyday routine into a space of reflexion about
human condition.
Xavier Cahen
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