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January 23, 2010 through to March 07, 2010 MANON DE PAUW. INTRIGUES |
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Opening Reception: Saturday, January 23 at 8 PM Member's Walkthrough: Saturday, January 23 at 7:30 PM The works in the exhibition Manon De Pauw. Intrigues describe the path the artist has taken since the beginning of this decade. Photograms, photographs, performative setups, single-channel videos and multi-channel video installations investigate light and the image in ways as varied as they are poetic. Manipulation of accessories, materials and colours, unfurling gestures, hands and bodies, recourse to various means of mechanical and digital recording, and use of surfaces of inscription like paper, tables, screens and light boxes are all part of this protocol of artistic experimentation that generates a visual writing through which various ages of the image run like veins. ![]() Manon De Pauw, L'apprentie [The Apprentice] (deital), 2008, Digital ink-jet prints and light boxes, group of five elements, 75 x 100 cm each If Manon De Pauw explores the appearing of the image — with its measure of unpredictability, suspended materiality, narrative potential and motion — it is because much of her work is produced in the darkroom or the shadows of the studio. She has the ability to latch onto the fragile breath of the image as it emerges under the effect of light, recording its luminous fluidity to create the tangible body of the image that asserts itself before our eyes. From the flickering caves of Lascaux to the candlelight paintings of Georges de la Tour, from the pure chromatic spaces of the canvases of Claude Tousignant to the coloured acetates of Michael Snow, the same emanating body of light and shadow endlessly recasts the image's spell. ![]() Manon De Pauw The notions "teaching body," "apprentice," "proof," "workshop" and "repertoire" in the works' titles best define the undercurrent of research centred on experimentation and the image-inventing process. Spectral silhouettes, rotating bodies, effects of transparency and opacity, fleeting and sustained glows in rays of light, multiple temporal effects and sound presences fuelled by the arsenal of technology all create a fascinating merry-go-round that cannot fail to intrigue the gaze and renew our unquenched thirst for the image. Louise Déry, Curator
Art Now Visitors in the Arts Lecture Series |

