Exhibition

Nathalie Du Pasquier : As The Plane Was Reaching Cruising Altitude

26 Jun 2019 – 16 Aug 2019

Regular hours

Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00

Save Event: Nathalie Du Pasquier : As The Plane Was Reaching Cruising Altitude2

I've seen this

People who have saved this event:

close

In Nathalie Du Pasquier’s first exhibition at Anton Kern Gallery, the artist presents an installation of colorful geometric works on paper and monochromatic wooden objects, using the floorplan of the gallery as a field for her composition.

About

Nathalie Du Pasquier (b. 1957, Bordeaux, France) is a Milan-based artist, and founding member of Memphis, an influential Postmodern design and architecture collective active in Italy throughout the 1980s. Her design practice encompasses decorative surfaces, furniture, jewelry, and iconic textile patterns. In 1987, Du Pasquier pivoted away from the design world, and has since devoted herself to painting. Still lifes and architectural abstractions that play with flattened space dominate her practice.

 Juxtaposing two-dimensional patterns and three-dimensional constructions, the artist examines the relationship between pictorial space and actual planes in the surrounding environment.

Extending from this, the exhibition As The Plane Was Reaching Cruising Altitude, features 19 column-like oil on paper works attached directly to the walls, and interspersed wooden constructions placed at perpendicular angles. Each ‘column’ is comprised of two or three modules, which the artist created without prior sketching and independently of one another. Du Pasquier’s modules are drawn from an internal repertoire of colors and shapes, which she continually recycles and recombines, each time creating something entirely unique.

Through an intuitive collage-like process, she stacks multiple modules together to form a single work. Some are on a rectangular piece of paper, while others are cut out around shapes within the module, adding curves and variation to the towering silhouettes. The colorfully patterned columns, while abstract and completely flush against the walls, are suggestive of buildings, furniture, totems, or imaginary machines

The addition of a thick black painted stripe skirting the bottom of the walls unites and grounds the columns, acting as a low black shelf. Of course, the absence of shadows keeps them in the world of illusory space. The stripe, alluding to gravity and weight, segues into the freestanding three-dimensional constructions with wooden objects arranged on top. These three-dimensional forms are not sculptures, but shapes, which have existed in the artist’s memory for a long time. As a visual and physical counterpart to the columns, they punctuate and animate the space, and all together form a poetic and liminal landscape.

Nathalie Du Pasquier’s work has been exhibited internationally in solo and group exhibitions since the late 1980s. 

What to expect? Toggle

Comments

Have you been to this event? Share your insights and give it a review below.