Praz-Delavallade

Philippe Decrauzat

27 Mar - 01 May 2010

© Philippe Decrauzat
Exhibition view
PHILIPPE DECRAUZAT

27.03.2010 - 01.05.2010

Praz-Delavallade is glad to announce the third one-man show of the Swiss artist, Philippe Decrauzat.
The first room in the rue Louise Weiss gallery displays an installation consisting of five canvasses extracted from an undulating continuum divided into five different sequences: five shaped canvasses.
Indeed, the frame of the canvas proper follows the undulation suggested by the motif, but only up to a point, since the sides are sharply cut off. Comparing these to the corresponding series of paintings, it appears that the deductive logic governing the forms is abandoned, the frame is deducted from the pattern only for part of it. Each of these canvasses represents an excerpt from a longer sequential line. They are placed in the space out of order, in a break with continuity. Philippe Decrauzat stresses the illusion through an undulatory motif borrowed from op art as applied to his big scale Shaped Canvasses. As a result, the viewer finds himself physically involved through immersion in a perceived experience that situates him an authentic de-construction, a kind of freeze frame shot.
The way the artist displays the works in the space and the concept of the paintings itselves is close to motion picture editing technics and point to Philippe Decrauzat’s interest in experimental movies and optical technologies.

As a matter of fact, the concept of perception lies at the core of that kind of cinematography, and this is too, indeed, what Decrauzat explores in his third film shown in the second room.

“screen-o-scope - film 16mm. 4min15s. B/W, silent
As in his previous films, Decrauzat uses no camera. He works from images excerpted from sundry sources. Here, he draws from the motion picture Rashomon, by Akira Kurosawa (1950), extracting pictures he will use in a different context. Rashomon consists of a time-warped narration, in which versions of the same event, a crime, as perceived by diffrent witnesses, are retold. The images chosen by Decrauzat come from the key scene of the film. These take place in a forest, with the camera focusing on the shining through trees. In Kurosawa’s film, these views serve as a transition to indicate a change: passing from the subconscious to the conscious for the female character, or backtracking in time for other witnesses. Decrauzat takes these images of sunlight shining through trees as a base for his work: contrasts are emphazised, shadings erased in order to obtain a more graphic, abstracted image.
These shots reveal some of the artist’s recurrent thoughts, namely his interest in pulsating light. They will not fail, either, to bring to mind the very circumstancies in which Brion Gysin conceived the idea of the Dream Machine.
And thus, Decrauzat’s editing or montage creates a pulsating effect that inescapably captures the viewer in its syncopated pusation. (flicker effect)
Dazzlement, the temporary blindness caused by staring too long into the sun, has often been studied as part of visual function and optical phenomena. These images from Rashomon conjure up a conception of perceived vision based on the sun’s observation and lead to the very process of motion picture projection.
In the second locale of the gallery, rue Duchefdelaville, Philippe Decrauzat picks up this score of variations on the the theme of luminous effects (black to white, and white to black) in a series of striped canvasses. Through tint gradations, like the addition layers ranging from black to white, he gives form to a moving visual transition.
A monumental sculpture, Man The Square, is presented in the same space. This is a plane leaning at an angle and pierced by a hole, whose motif is drawn from a photo board by Muybridge in which a character, while jumping, grabs the wires that form a grid to measure movement, thus distorting the structure. As he often does, Decrauzat focuses on the boundaries between two and three dimensions. Hence the title, as Man The Square refers to a document by Claude Bragton which also studies the slipping of a volume through a surface.
 

Tags: Philippe Decrauzat, Brion Gysin