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[Paris, art center]
Centre National de la Photographie (CNP)
Hôtel Salomon de Rothschild, 11 rue Berryer (corner of avenue
de Friedland), 75008
01-53-76-12-32 f: 01-53-76-12-33
Mon, Wed-Sun, 12-7; closed Tues
admission: 30/15F
métro: Étoile
CNP is without a doubt the best place to see high-quality
contemporary photography in Paris. The location in an elegant old
mansion is a bit surreal since you first climb a grand baroque staircase
and then enter barren, somewhat shabby rooms with unconventional
artworks hanging on the walls or deposited on the floors. Despite
the initial impression and the oddities of room sizes and shapes,
the galleries are flexible enough to accommodate the varied scale
of contemporary photographs as well as photo-installation and video-projection
projects.
Exhibitions feature work by emerging artists, often
presented for the first time in France or Europe. On a single visit
you may see several one-person shows or a group show that brings
together diverse creations under the umbrella of a timely and original
theme. Typically the art is impressive and innovative in concept,
technique and format. Since CNP does not have a permanent collection,
all works are on loan or are temporary creations made on-site specifically
for an exhibition. Some work is also the result of a residency or
experimental project sponsored by the center. Recent exhibitions:
Peter Beard, Anna and Bernhard Blume, Sophie Calle, Hannah Collins,
Pascal Convert, Wyn Geleynse, Anthony Hernandez, Manfred Jade, Henrik
Plenge Jakobsen, Valérie Jouve, Andréa Keen, Carl
de Keyzer, Zoe Leonard, Ryuji Miyamoto, Eric Poitevin, Olivier Rebufa,
Eugène Richards, Thomas Ruff, Sam Samore, Patrick Tosani,
Contemporary Austrian Photographers. CNP publishes many catalogues
associated with its exhibitions and an informative quarterly journal
with articles on current exhibitions and essays on notable people
or relevant topics.
[Paris, architecture, public art]
Tadao Ando, Meditation Space, 1996
UNESCO, 7 place de Fontenoy, 75007
01-45-68-03-71
Mon-Fri, 9-6
admission: free
métro: Ségur or École Militaire
Beyond the patio, at the most remote part of the
back courtyard within the UNESCO headquarters, is a cylindrical
structure commissioned to symbolize peace and to commemorate the
50th anniversary of the adoption of UNESCO's constitution. Designed
by the architect Tadao ANDO, Meditation Space(1996), is an
extraordinary work that exemplifies the majesty and emotive power
of a simple contemporary monument. To enter, you walk down a ramp
and angle back across a shallow pond that encircles the structure
with a continuous film of flowing water. The doorway is a cutout
opening at the base of a two-story concrete form marked only by
the regularity of the casting holes and grid lines. This doorway
and a duplicate one on the opposite side also serve as windows,
bringing light into the interior, which is otherwise a darkened
sanctuary permeated by a deep aura of tranquility. Except for four
high-backed armchairs that have a regal bearing despite their industrial,
black-steel reductive shape, the space is empty. (The chairs are
set back against the wall as pairs facing each other.) The design
of the stone floor - concentric circles, radiating lines and a cross
axis - only strengthens the circular, centering shape of the cylinder
space without becoming an additive element or decoration. The interior
floor and base of the pond bear symbolic meaning, however, since
the granite comes from Hiroshima and was exposed to the atomic bomb
fallout. It is just this subtle, unpretentious sense of symbolism
and the expressiveness of basic elements that makes Ando's edifice
an impressive monument to peace.
[Lyon, public art]
Anne and Patrick Poirier
La fontaine des géants, 1985
espace de l'Europe Jean Monnet
métro: Charpennes
From the métro, walk a few blocks down rue
Henri Rolland; cross rue Jacques Brel; enter the park; walk forward
veering to the left. (This is referred to as the Tonkin neighborhood.)
If you don't immediately see the fountain, follow the voices of
kids who seem to be a constant presence in and around it, weather
permitting.
The Poiriers typically present fragmented classical
images in their art, suggesting the collapse of order or Western
civilization. In The Fountain of Giants they have outdone
themselves by creating a marvelous, witty, surreal fountain that
is a perfect artwork for a neighborhood park. A heap of rocks piled
high into a mountainous mass sits in a bed of water, with jets of
water spraying inward from the corners of a surrounding shallow
pool. Interspersed with the rocks are marble fragments of classical
sculpture - four gargantuan eyes and one colossal mouth - and architecture.
Mixed among this conglomerate are two large bronze arrows, one of
which sits atop the mass pointing downward. On the one hand, the
fountain fascinates children who clearly respond to its form and
imagery. On the other hand, it is visually and conceptually provocative
as a "serious" work of art, raising all sorts of questions about
survival, heritage, contemporary culture . . .

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