Submission
March 04, 2024

it was a hot day, a day that was blue all through

Group show curated by Anastasia Krizanovska @Crèvecoeur, Paris
February 09 — April 13, 2024

Exhibition view

“It was a hot day, a day that was blue all through,” we can read in the opening paragraphs of Nabokov’s Invitation to a Beheading, written in 1932. According to the author, it is his most poetic novel. A dystopic tale in which the main character — a prisoner waiting for his sentence to be carried out — invents an imaginary world made up of metaphors and allusions. In which a day can become blue, a jailer can waltz and a spider can talk. The novel’s controversial end suggests that the prisoner escapes from being executed thanks to his imagination, which transports him on a journey between time and space. Azar Nafisi analysed this book in her autobiographical novel, Reading Lolita in Tehran (2002). While teaching western literature at the University of Tehran during the 1979 revolution, she extolled the strength of fiction and its transcendent power. She wrote how, under a regime that annihilates metaphors and allusions, the understanding of stories and of literature withers away. Fiction becomes flat and banal in the service of a cause and the nuances of narrative disappear.

Daring to lay down an image, to hold reality at a distance, to liberate yourself from it or deny it are all ways that artists have created in order to be free. Fiction persists in artworks despite the chaotic confusion of new data, and despite a perpetual and monotonous din. Stories, metaphors and imaginary tales lie at the heart of this exhibition.

Intergalactic worlds, drawing their references from all kinds of cultures, feature in Inès di Folco Jemni’s canvases. In her oil paintings, highlighted with Venetian turpentine and glitter, imaginary characters appear, with female traits, travelling in a fictional, indeterminate space. Details of towns with medieval architectures, magical, sometimes-carnivorous flowers, fairies, and dense, mauve sunsets can be glimpsed. The atmosphere of a sacred rite proliferates, wavering between Message, Souvenir and Médina.

In his sculptures, Ladji Diaby creates a new, highly personal language, linked to his home environment, in a direct relationship with his origins. There is always a question of objects and images, which he uses as transfers — a technique he exploits in his work to speak of spirituality, emotions, feelings and idols, but also of the absurdity of official, imposed narratives.

Tomasz Kowalski’s work oscillates freely between different eras and styles in the history of art, while producing an iconography in which his own, fragmented imagination can evolve. He destroys the hierarchy between sleep, dreaming and wakefulness while celebrating the freedom of the subconscious. His characters sometimes seem to vanish into depths of colour. In collaboration with his mother, the textile artist Alicja Kowalska, Tomasz Kowalski has also developed a tapestry practice.

There has been much talk of the apocalyptic aesthetic of Cezary Poniatowski’s works in relief, made of imitation leather, carpets, extruded polystyrene or insulation foam. This is science fiction conveyed by forms and objects often codified as coming from Eastern Europe. Through the prism of memory, symbols and a sardonic sense of humour, these reliefs describe a technocratic world, awaiting transformation.

In Peng Zuqiang’s film The Cyan Garden, 2022, collective history and personal stories intertwine. The image rotates around a former clandestine radio station, active from 1969 to 1981, now supposedly a hotel. “Voice of the Malayan Revolution” can be heard before the protagonist flips the switch to select a romantic song and continue cleaning an Airbnb apartment, with a traditional décor, somewhere, in another town, drifting between the past and the present.

The body of work actively defies the conventional boundaries of architectural design and digital methodologies. Characterized by abstract, evolving animations, these creations commence with elemental compositions, which unfold into elaborate geometric structures and nuanced chromatic layers, traversing time and spatial dimensions.

The work presented is a unique and continuous stream, akin to browser page responding through code, constituting the exhibit as a self-adapting body of work that seamlessly integrates through space.
The exhibition is further enriched by a series of digital prints, intimately connected to the primary installation.The trio’s output transcends mere visual spactable. It embodies the ethos of dynamic, generative architecture. Their artistic conceptualization is rendered tangible through the medium of coding, an approach that challenges and redefines the parameters of conceptual art.
Intriguingly, these works are in perpetual flux, eschewing a fixed narrative. They aspire to depict reality in its unadorned state, through the metaphor of the interplay between hardware and software. On a larger canvas, they reflect as aspirational model of society.

With this project, we invite the public to immerse themselves in an experience that is as physical as it is reflective of our contemporary technological age.

Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2022 Oil and gouache on linen 146 × 116 × 2 cm
Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2022 Oil and gouache on linen 146 × 116 × 2 cm
Inès di Folco Jemni Message, 2023 Oil on canvas 100 × 100 cm
Inès di Folco Jemni Message, 2023 Oil on canvas 100 × 100 cm
Exhibition view
Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2024 Gouache and oil on jute 42 × 32 cm
Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2024 Gouache and oil on jute 42 × 32 cm
Exhibition view
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2024 Mixed media 92.5 × 130 × 36 cm
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2024 Mixed media 92.5 × 130 × 36 cm
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2024 Mixed media 92.5 × 130 × 36 cm
Cezary Poniatowski Guardians of Sleep, 2024 Extruded polystyrene, metal vents, gunfoam 175 × 130 × 25 cm
Cezary Poniatowski Guardians of Sleep, 2024 Extruded polystyrene, metal vents, gunfoam 175 × 130 × 25 cm
Cezary Poniatowski Guardians of Sleep, 2024 Extruded polystyrene, metal vents, gunfoam 175 × 130 × 25 cm
Exhibition view
Cezary Poniatowski Domesticated, 2024 Faux leather, upholstery foam, carpet, screws, metal zip ties, wood, binoculars 70 × 60 × 15 cm
Cezary Poniatowski Domesticated, 2024 Faux leather, upholstery foam, carpet, screws, metal zip ties, wood, binoculars 70 × 60 × 15 cm
Cezary Poniatowski Domesticated, 2024 Faux leather, upholstery foam, carpet, screws, metal zip ties, wood, binoculars 70 × 60 × 15 cm
Exhibition view
Inès di Folco Jemni Médina, 2023 Oil on cardboard 50 × 40 cm ( 51.5 × 42 cm framed)
Inès di Folco Jemni Médina, 2023 Oil on cardboard 50 × 40 cm ( 51.5 × 42 cm framed)
Inès di Folco Jemni Souvenir, 2024 Oil on canvas 100 × 100 cm
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2023 Mixed media 82 × 58 × 58 cm
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2023 Mixed media 82 × 58 × 58 cm
Ladji Diaby Untitled, 2023 Mixed media 82 × 58 × 58 cm
Alicja Kowalska and Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2020-21 2 panels — sisal, wool 2 pancels : 140 × 130 cm (each)
Alicja Kowalska and Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2020-21 2 panels — sisal, wool 2 pancels : 140 × 130 cm (each)
Alicja Kowalska and Tomasz Kowalski Untitled, 2020-21 2 panels — sisal, wool 2 pancels : 140 × 130 cm (each)
Peng Zuqiang The Cyan Garden, 2022 Single channel, color & BW,16 mm transferred to HD video 8 min 5 sec Edition of 5
Play Video
Peng Zuqiang The Cyan Garden, 2022 Single channel, color & BW,16 mm transferred to HD video 8 min 5 sec Edition of 5
Exterior view

it was a hot day, a day that was blue all through

Crèvecoeur, Paris
February 09 — April 13, 2024

Artists: Ladji Diaby, Inès di Folco Jemni, Tomasz Kowalski, Cezary Poniatowski, Peng Zuqiang

Curation: Anastasia Krizanovska

Photography: Martin Argyroglo / All images copyright and courtesy of the artist and the gallery.

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