Exhibition

Florian Pugnaire & David Raffini. Show Me

19 Jan 2018 – 3 Mar 2018

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l’étrangère is pleased to present SHOW ME featuring, for the first time in the UK, collaborative film and sculptures by Florian Pugnaire and David Raffini whose award winning works have been included in the Centre Pompidou’s collection in Paris, France.

About

SHOW ME is a film whose protagonist is the carcass of an Opel-GT that transforms itself into a sculpture. With the help of a device hidden in the passenger compartment, the race car ‘performs’, comes to life, begins to ‘breath’ then gradually expands, stretches and tears its body. The action references the cult 1983 film by John Carpenter, Christine, in which a classic 1950s car, Plymouth Fury, turns into a murderous machine with an astonishing ability to self- rebuild. SHOW ME reverses the process into self-destruction.

The process also refers to the fantasy of a living machine, extremely present in the collective imagination, and records the creation of sculpture as a residual object with the eerie, apocalyptic atmosphere typical of the artist’s work, an atmosphere that evokes the end of days, getting progressively more lost in a decaying world full of empty, abandoned buildings, burned carcasses, and darkly worrying landscapes.

Pugnaire and Raffini’s collaborative practice is particularly concerned with rendering visible the mutation of objects, whilst investigating the nature of material morphologies. In terms of the objects they choose to transform, they have a clear liking for engines of various sorts, symbolising mankind's technological development. They blow them up or transform them in all sorts of ways, so that the materials are submitted to various transformative, often violent forces before being reborn in a new shape.

Pugnaire and Raffini play with the idea of an object generating its own various alterations — transfiguring, and evolving within its own skin, of its own accord. These material transformations sometimes take on a fictional dimension in the production of a film, whilst their sculptural works appear to be remnants of an event (a crash or catastrophe). Many appear to be frozen in the middle of a physical transformation — unfinished, they have an air of being consciously self-inflicted by the object itself. 

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Exhibiting artistsToggle

Florian Pugnaire

David Raffini

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