Group Show: Los sueños de la luz / Les rêves de la lumière

21 September 2024 - 18 January 2025
  • Los sueños de la luz / Les rêves de la lumière

    September 21, 2024 - January 18, 2025
  • Exhibiting Artists:
    Djabril Boukhenaïssi
    Marcella Barceló
    Camille Fischer
    Alexandre Lenoir
    Johanna Mirabel
    Marie de Villepin
     

    Mariane Ibrahim is pleased to present Los sueños de la luz  / Les rêves de la lumière (The Dreams of Light), an exhibition curated by Marisol Rodriguez featuring the works of Djabril Boukhenaïssi (1993), Marcella Barceló (1992), Camille Fischer (1984), Alexandre Lenoir (1992), Johanna Mirabel (1991) and Marie de Villepin (1986). 

     

    This exhibition is a choral portrait of contemporary French creation, presenting approaches to painting from various fields, from music to personal and social narratives. Although the techniques vary from the academic to the experimental, one aspect that unites the practices of these artists is their exploration of the representation of the human form, which oscillates between presence and evanescence, between its shape and its aura.  

     

    Inspired by the fruitful dialogue between art history, philosophy and literature, Djabril Boukhenaïssi'swork explores the construction and interrelation of memory and social imagination. For this exhibition, the artist developed an original body of work with which he proposes a subtle riddle to the visitor. Faced with a panorama of discordant perspectives inhabited by diverse figures, the artist invites us to consider our position as observers and co-authors of a scene constructed from memories and fiction 

     

    For Boukhenaïssi, as for most of these young artists, literature serves as a consistent companions, as attested by the work of Camille Fischer, inspired, among others, by Lise Deharme, the prolific surrealist writer relegated to the role of André Breton's romantic muse for almost a century; and by the vast body of poetic and critical work of the recently deceased Annie Le Brun, considered the last surrealist. In Fischer's work the societal weight of feminine beauty and the paradoxes of sensuality take shape in installations that integrate the worlds of haute couture, drawing and painting.  

     

    Painting's historical capacity to absorb and respond to the culture of its time is evident in the work of Alexandre Lenoir, who integrates the luminous language of digital imaging into a painting process made up of hundreds of layers of colors in varying degrees of dissolution. Like Lenoir, who hails from the French Caribbean islands, Marcella Barceló's childhood exposure to the light and color of an island environment profoundly influences her work. She intricately weaves these elements into a continuous narrative, creating chapters of a never-ending story. Her art, characterized by solitary female figures inhabiting a fantastical world, is deeply infused with her upbringing in Mallorca. 

     

    Barceló's intimate formats lead to Johanna Mirabel's imposing canvases that remind viewers of the canonical formats of Baroque painting. This is no coincidence for an artist who emulates the ancient techniques of velatura with diluted iron oxide to achieve a luminous painting that engages both the reds of Velázquez and the reddish sand of Guyana as a critical dialogue between histories. 

     

    While Mirabel activates stillness in her work, Marie de Villepin's paintings center action, where gestures are organized throughout the space in a rhythmic and sonic whirlwind. As one approaches her canvases we can almost hear her, carefully delving into the story she tells through each brushstroke. 

     

    In the works of these artists, light becomes a medium that reveals and conceals, that illuminates the fragility of the figures and the power of their stories. Each brushstroke, each shadow and glow becomes an echo of our times, where digital and analog, fact and dream, past and present intertwine in a continuous dialogue without borders.  


  • Djabril Boukhenaïssi (b. 1993 in France; lives and works between Paris and the Perche region) explores the delicate threshold between...

    Djabril Boukhenaïssi (b. 1993 in France; lives and works between Paris and the Perche region) explores the delicate threshold between reality and fiction in constructing memory. He relies exclusively on sketches of past experiences to create his paintings, distancing himself from the immediacy of the photographic process.  

    His references span art history, philosophy, literature, and arts criticism. Influenced by German and French romanticism, he is currently exploring in a large-scale project the representations of night and its symbolism in the history of Western art. For Los sueños de la luz, Boukhenaissi created a new body of work, a panorama of multiple points of view that explores the elusive nature of memory.

  • Marcella Barceló's (b. 1992 Majorca, Spain; lives and works in Paris) painting is infused with her deep connection to Japanese...

    Marcella Barceló's (b. 1992 Majorca, Spain; lives and works in Paris) painting is infused with her deep connection to Japanese culture, in which she discovered Shintoism, whose animist thought echoed the landscapes of her childhood: this non-anthropocentric approach to life is reflected in her work, which blends autofiction, fairy tales, mythological narratives and ecofeminist thinking. Adolescent silhouettes cohabit with illusory, anachronistic flora and fauna (carnivorous plants, giant flowers, dinosaurs...), evoking Henry Darger, the films of Hayao Miyazaki and the works of Lewis Carroll.

  • Camille Fischer (b. 1984 Schiltigheim, France; lives and works in Strasbourg, France) cultivates a strong link between drawing and performance,...

    Camille Fischer (b. 1984 Schiltigheim, France; lives and works in Strasbourg, France) cultivates a strong link between drawing and performance, fabrics and materials. Simultaneously fantastic, sentimental, philosophical and psychological, or poetic and prosaic, her works appear as fragments and ornaments of a choreography. These fragments are organized with the freedom and freshness characteristic of her work, reinforcing the principle of transversality and multidisciplinarity necessary for contemporary art. Between painting, drawing, installation, performance, fashion, literature and philosophy, all aspects of creation resonate to immerse the viewer in a dreamlike and secret dimension.

  • Alexandre Lenoir's (b. 1992 French-Caribbean; lives and works between Paris and New York) work explores the versatility of the pictorial...

    Alexandre Lenoir's (b. 1992 French-Caribbean; lives and works between Paris and New York) work explores the versatility of the pictorial image, created from personal photographs. Landscapes and figures gradually become emblematic, or poetic forms that recall a familiar place from a dream, a myth or a memory, a place where abstraction meets reality. His variations on evocative forms reveal themselves without us being able to anticipate the final image. The image emerges slowly, through protocols devised by the artist and carried out over weeks, even months: masking with masking tape, multiple layers of gouache, until the paint permeates the surface according to the “accidents” that the painter has deliberately programmed. Through a unique performative and intuitive gesture, the aquatic, mineral and vegetal elements of Lenoir's paintings acquire a spiritual dimension.

  • Johanna Mirabel's (b. 1991 Colombes, France; lives and works in Paris) painting develops in delicate layers where characters are superimposed,...

    Johanna Mirabel's (b. 1991 Colombes, France; lives and works in Paris) painting develops in delicate layers where characters are superimposed, creating a story that is both eloquent and inexplicable. This desire to evoke atmospheres and recreate emotions without explicitly representing or explaining them is influenced by Edouard Glissant's ideas. Particularly, Glissant's concept of the right to opacity is crucial for an artist who subtly explores the construction of identity in her large-format works, applying iron oxide priming techniques reminiscent of those used by Velazquez and other European Baroque masters.

  • Marie de Villepin's (b. 1986 Washington D.C; lives and works in Paris) paintings reflect the artistry of a composer seeking...

    Marie de Villepin's (b. 1986 Washington D.C; lives and works in Paris) paintings reflect the artistry of a composer seeking to encapsulate an experience to resonate an entire life in the lyrics of a song. The layers of her musical exploration are explicitly revealed in her works. In front of most canvases, the viewer asks in a hushed voice, ”what does this represent?”, similar to the works of artists like Edward Hopper or Edvard Munch, the mystery lies in knowing, what story do these works tell?