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Julio Le Parc: The Eye of the Cyclops

— September 2011

Associated media

Cover image from the catalogue of Julio Le Parc's exhibition 'The Eye of the Cyclops'

Works from 1959 to 1971

Curator: Matthieu Poirier

Opening on Friday, September 9, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.

On view until November 5, Tuesday to Saturday, 2 p.m. to 7 p.m.

During the 1960s, Julio Le Parc (born in 1928 in Buenos Aires, lives and works in Cachan, France) was at the origin of numerous aesthetic practices that are of great importance today. The works from 1959 to 1971 gathered by the art historian Matthieu Poirier for this exhibition rely on dematerialization, perceptive haze, formal reduction, artificial lights, environments, the audience's implication, and varying levels of vision. These elements have become of crucial importance for several contemporary artists such as James Turrell Anthony McCall, Dan Graham, Carsten Höller, Ann Veronica Janssens, Olafur Eliasson, Anish Kapoor, Jeppe Hein or Philippe Decrauzat, just to name only a few.

Other works by Le Parc, shown this year at the MOCA in Los Angeles and at the Centre Pompidou-Metz, reveal a language that is at once minimalist and complex and in opposition to classical abstract compositions.

In 1972, after Le Parc had already become a well-respected artist with these artworks, Jacques Lassaigne, the director of the Museum of Modern Art of Paris, suggested a large retrospective exhibition of his works from the years 1959 to 1972. Nonetheless, the ambiance remained anti-institutional and, after having weighed and explored the pros and cons of this show in a long text, Le Parc declared that he was 'incapable of making a decision'. He decided to flip a coin: heads he would accept, tails he would refuse. On one fateful Saturday in April, the artist's young son tossed a coin into the air in front of witnesses at the museum. The coin landed tails up and the exhibition did not take place.

In the decades that followed, Le Parc’s work took another direction and it was only at the end of the 1990s that his work retrospectively gained new life, alongside with the revival of perceptual art. Let us imagine today — without making any presumptions regarding the curatorial intentions some 40 years ago — that the coin lands heads up and that the cancelled show is now taking place at gallery BUGADA & CARGNEL.

Read our review of Ken Johnson’s Are You Experienced? How Psychedelic Consciousness Transformed Modern Art

 

 


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