Lille3000: Eldorado-Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis)
Musée des Beaux-arts de Tourcoing (MUba), Lille
April 25 to August 26, 2019Li Qing,Neighbour's Window· Pushkin in Shanghai
wood, plexiglass, metal, oil color, markers, aluminium-plastic panel 148 x 98 x 8 cm 2015-2016
Li Qing,Neighbor's Window· Upturned Eaves
wood, oil on plexiglass, aluminium-plastic panel 151 x 118.5 x 11 cm 2018
Li Qing,Neighbor's Window·Post Office
wood, metal, plexiglass, oil color, clothes, photo, aluminium-plastic panel
148 x 118 x 9 cm 2017-2018
Li Qing,Neighbour‘s Window·Moscow Style
wood, glass, metal, oil color 148 x 103 x 7.5 cm 2013
Exhibition view of Lille3000: Eldorado-Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis), Musée des Beaux-arts de Tourcoing (MUba), Lille
Exhibition view of Lille3000: Eldorado-Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis), Musée des Beaux-arts de Tourcoing (MUba), Lille
Exhibition view of Lille3000: Eldorado-Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis), Musée des Beaux-arts de Tourcoing (MUba), Lille
Exhibition view of Lille3000: Eldorado-Children of Paradise (Les Enfants du Paradis), Musée des Beaux-arts de Tourcoing (MUba), Lille
Artists: Dan Attoe, Hernan Bas, Jules de Balincourt, Romain Bernini, Guillaume Bresson, Nina Childress, Jérémy Demester, Tim Eitel, Till Gerhard, Eberhard Havekost, Thomas Lélu, Li Qing, Pierre Seinturier, Claire Tabouret, Ida Tursic & Wilfred Mille, Iris Van Dongen.
The exhibition "Les Enfants du Paradis", part of the Lille3000 Eldorado, shows a new generation of French and foreign artists who interweave figuration and abstraction in their works, creating scenes and puzzles. The exhibition invites us on a journey into a world of images, trotted by a new opulence and renewal of painting, between enchantment and disillusionment, lost illusions and exotic melancholy.
The exhibition was curated by Jérôme Sans & Jean-Max Colard. In collaboration with Isabelle Bernini.
Painting has long been fascinated by the search for Elsewhere. The painters of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries even fuelled the collective imagination and supported the colonial adventure with exotic or Oriental visions that were largely imagined, and above all highly stereotypical. Impossible now to go back to this: in the twentieth century, painting developed its critical awareness, moved away from these misleading exoticisms and massively accompanied the most emancipatory political struggles. The quest for other horizons is undoubtedly to be sought on the side of abstraction, which, for painting and its viewers, opens new zones made of reflection and spirituality, bathed in the materiality of colours but clearly detached from the contingencies of the real world.
Is there still an Elsewhere for painting today? What can painters still offer in a globalised world, mapped to the extreme and, above all, saturated with images? When visions of exoticism are primarily the preserve of a tourist industry promoting and overselling highly formatted “dream destinations”? It is this very current situation of painting that the exhibition Les Enfants du paradis (The Children of Paradise) intends to address, with a title borrowed, for its poetry, from Marcel Carné’s famous film of the same name in which the characters are as extravagant as they are melancholic.
In pursuit of Eldorado, and in search of another elsewhere that is neither the old exoticism of the colonial world nor the formatted visions of international tourism, nor even the ultra- capitalist dream of tax havens, the exhibition Les Enfants du paradis reflects a new generation of French and foreign painters who, for several years now, have been populating the web space with enigmatic scenes, undefined landscapes, washed-out paradises and improbable communities. Whether inspired by folk rites or revisiting the utopian ideologies of recent decades, these artists navigate freely between figuration and abstraction and reaffirm the strength of the painted image within a contemporary world that is once again turning towards nature, in an approach that is at odds with the Romantic imaginary. Their nature is the territory of a new confrontation, where mankind struggles with an intensely felt need to break free of the frame. Their pictorial reveries assert painting as a place of intense and colourful enjoyment: art as Eldorado.
Testifying to the genuine richness and renewal of contemporary painting, the exhibition invites visitors to embark on a journey of unprecedented pictorial explorations, between enchantments and disenchantments, lost illusions and new ecstasies.
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