Pierre Faure

Born 1965, lives and works in Paris

The stage 5
Lambda print, 50 x 70 cm, Ed. 5

Pierre Faure

Born 1965, lives and works in Paris

Curriculum Vitae

1965 Born in France
Studies of Photography at Ecole Nationale Supérieure de la Photographie, Arles / FR
2003 Artist-in-residence of the Villa Kujoyama, Kyoto / JP
Current Lives and works in Paris / FR

Grants and awards

Solo Exhibitions (selected)

2013 Light Structures, Van der Grinten Galerie, Cologne / DE
2012 Burning Fields, Chapelle de l'Hôpital Général, Clermont-Ferrand / FR
2007 Japan 2003-2006, Kudlek van der Grinten Galerie, Cologne / DE
2005 JAPAN, van der grinten galerie, Cologne / DE
2003 In the Common Stream, Büro für Fotos, Cologne / DE
2002 Centre National de la Photographie, L'Atelier, Paris / FR
2001 Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts, La Box, Bourges / FR
2000 Institut Français Dresden / DE
Galerie Büro Für Fotos, Cologne / DE
Espace Culturel François Mitterand, Beauvais / FR

Group Exhibitions (selected)

2013 Double Jeu, Université Paris 10 / FR
2012 Documents pour une information alternative, Espace Van Gogh, rencontres internationales de la photographie, Arles / FR
Incursions, Université Paris 10 / FR
2010 For Intérieur, Festival Voies Off, Arles / FR
Printemps de Septembre, Extraits de Printemps: La part des ombres, Musée Henri-Martin, Cahors / FR
2008 Circuler, partager, orienter, Centre photographique de Lectoure / FR
Signes d'existence, Musée National des Beaux-Arts, Buenos-Aires / AR
41° Nord, Orléans / FR
2007 Signes d’existence, Musée d’Art Contemporain, Santiago / CL
Interior Views. Photographic Explorations of the European Parliament, E.P Bruxelles, E.C Copenhague / DK
So Close - So far away, CRAC Alsace, Altkirch / FR
2006 Japon – La lumière et la ville, Musée des Beaux Arts d’Orléans / F
La région humaine, Septembre de la photographie, Musée d’Art Contemporain, Lyon / F
Signes d’existence, China Central Academy of Fine Arts, Peking / CHN
Whisper Not (a different dimension of seeing), Huis-Marseille, Amsterdam / NL
2005 D’un Moment à l’autre, Rencontres Intern. de la Photographie, Arles / FR
2004 Paysages invisibles, Musée départemental d’art contemporain de Rochechouart / FR
Wirklich Wahr!, Ruhrlandmuseum, Essen / DE
Collections, Fonds régional d’art contemporain de Basse-Normandie, Caen / FR
2003 +/- 5, 10, 15, 20 – 20 ans d’une collection, Le Plateau, Paris / FR
Des voisinages, Le Plateau, FRAC Ile de France, Paris / FR
Espace de rêve, Die Wandelhalle, Forum für Kunst im Öffentlichen Raum, Cologne / DE
2002 Neue Besen kehren gut, Städtische Galerie, Wolfsburg / DE
Ma maison dans ta rue, Frac Basse Normandie, Caen / FR
TRADE, Commondities, Communication and Conciousness in World Trade Today, NFI, Netherlands Fotoinstituut, Rotterdam / NL
2001 TRADE, Waren, Wege und Werte im Welthandel heute, Commissaires, Urs Stahel et Thomas Seelig, Fotomuseum Winterthur/ CH
Théâtres du Fantastique, Printemps de Septembre, Festival für zeitgenössische Kunst Commissaire, Val Williams, Toulouse / FR
Arrêt sur image, art contemporain de France, Kunstwerke, Berlin / DE
2000 Chroniques du dehors et autres hypothèses, Rencontres Intern. de la Photographie, Arles / FR
Saison vidéo, Espace croisé, Roubaix. / FR
Espace Culturel François Mitterrand (S), Beauvais / FR
1999 Short Film Festival, Cantor Film Center, NYU / US
Devenirs (nouvelles acquisitions du FRAC Ile de France), Passage de Retz, Paris / FR
1998 A quoi rêvent les années 90?, (Commissaire, Jean-Charles Masséra), Centre d'Art Mira Phaleina, Montreuil / FR
Documents Documents, Casco, Utrecht / NL
Aquisition par FRAC d'Ile de France / FR
1997 DRAC Ile de France soutient la réalisation d’une oeuvre photographique / FR
Réalisation de La pesanteur et la grâce Colour video, sound, 13'
Présentation des Videos, Festival Traces de vies, Clermont-Ferrand / FR
Aquisition par la Vidéothèque de Paris
1996 Réalisation de Quelques jours en décembre, b&w video, sound, 82'
1995 Déserts, Système Friche Théâtre, Marseille / FR

Pierre Faure, Robert Currie

Light Structures

September 6, 2013

 — 

October 26, 2013

Van der Grinten Gallery is looking forward to the start of the season in September 2013 that opens with the dual exhibition “Light Structures”, featuring new works by Pierre Faure (*1964, France) and Robert Currie (*1976, UK).

Under this exhibition title, a dialogue between the works of these two artists is spun out. Their engagement with the possibilities of seeing and interpreting the available architectural space in its varying degrees of abstraction opens up a new visual experience for viewers.

Pierre Faure’s photographic works were shown in Cologne for the #rst time in 2000 within the framework of an exhibition series on young French contemporary art. Typical of Faure’s first work group was his interest in seemingly banal urban landscapes in which the human figure appears isolated, as though on a stage. His artistic focus is precisely on these “choreographies of the everyday” and is nurtured by his reading of French and international social theoreticians, critics and philosophers, as well as by cinematic aesthetics. With his second work group “Japan” (2005/2007) on the city views of a modern metropolis like Tokyo, Faure had begun to work out what is therein exemplary via the simple but ingenious blacking of the sky. Parallel to this, Pierre Faure created almost portrait-like images of people on the street and in cafés or public places, which he partly combined into montages.

Under the title “Drift”, “Wallpaper” and “Light Structures”, Faure’s newer photos continue the gesture of the intuitive assembling of everyday impressions, on the one hand, but, on the other, go even further in the reduction of the elements via the possibilities offered by digital editing. In this way the artist attempts to remove almost all the original content of the information from his shots. In the black- and-white photographs developed on baryta paper, only the most minimal components of the original pictures are legible. These are however organized in an innovative flat-plane stratagem and a drawing-like, linear configuration. With “Light Structures” Faure goes one step further, in that the main motif of the photos are simple scaffolds, i.e., structures that are perhaps little noticed but are ubiquitous in our immediate urban environs. These “constructions” reduced to their essence are visually composed simply of lines and joints, to the artist a symbol of a pictorial construct per se.

Pierre Faure’s works have been shown in institutional group exhibits in Winterthur, Amsterdam and Cologne as well as in numerous museums and institutions in France.

He is represented with works from various series, among others, in the collections of the Huis Marseille Amsterdam, FNAC Paris, Dresdner Bank/Commerzbank Frankfurt.

Pure structures likewise define the sculptural works by Robert Currie, which he makes into objects that are amazingly alive and energized. Born in 1976 and resident in London, Currie has for some years appeared on the art world scene with three-dimensional wall works and installations. His favorite material—besides his use of cassette and video tape—is nylon string, which he spans in precise patterns crosswise or lengthwise into Plexiglas cases. When these abstract vitrines are walked past, they generate a strong flickering sensation, and their interior body mass seems to expand infinitely. In his figurative works that seem like three-dimensional photographs, Currie applies black acrylic paint to an assemblage of nylon strings that are spanned in layers, arranged one behind the other. These works force the viewer to seek a standpoint that affords a view of the depiction in its entirety. Not till then do viewers have the possibility of perceiving them in their photographesque presence.

In the present exhibition, Robert Currie is showing completely new, freestanding objects. The geometric structures out of different colored nylon strings flow together from all sides. Whereby complex spatial drawings emerge that recall either a vortex or strict constructions.

Robert Currie studied at the Manchester Metropolitan University and at the Royal College of Art in London. In 2006 he was awarded a one-year scholarship from the London Florence Trust. In the meantime, his works can be found in many collections inland and abroad (Lady De Rothschild, Beth Rudin DeWoody, Defauwes, Simmons & Simmons) and in the public space in Frankfurt, London and Brussels.

Pierre Faure, Robert Currie

Light Structures

September 6, 2013

 — 

October 26, 2013

Van der Grinten Gallery is looking forward to the start of the season in September 2013 that opens with the dual exhibition “Light Structures”, featuring new works by Pierre Faure (*1964, France) and Robert Currie (*1976, UK).

Under this exhibition title, a dialogue between the works of these two artists is spun out. Their engagement with the possibilities of seeing and interpreting the available architectural space in its varying degrees of abstraction opens up a new visual experience for viewers.

Pierre Faure’s photographic works were shown in Cologne for the #rst time in 2000 within the framework of an exhibition series on young French contemporary art. Typical of Faure’s first work group was his interest in seemingly banal urban landscapes in which the human figure appears isolated, as though on a stage. His artistic focus is precisely on these “choreographies of the everyday” and is nurtured by his reading of French and international social theoreticians, critics and philosophers, as well as by cinematic aesthetics. With his second work group “Japan” (2005/2007) on the city views of a modern metropolis like Tokyo, Faure had begun to work out what is therein exemplary via the simple but ingenious blacking of the sky. Parallel to this, Pierre Faure created almost portrait-like images of people on the street and in cafés or public places, which he partly combined into montages.

Under the title “Drift”, “Wallpaper” and “Light Structures”, Faure’s newer photos continue the gesture of the intuitive assembling of everyday impressions, on the one hand, but, on the other, go even further in the reduction of the elements via the possibilities offered by digital editing. In this way the artist attempts to remove almost all the original content of the information from his shots. In the black- and-white photographs developed on baryta paper, only the most minimal components of the original pictures are legible. These are however organized in an innovative flat-plane stratagem and a drawing-like, linear configuration. With “Light Structures” Faure goes one step further, in that the main motif of the photos are simple scaffolds, i.e., structures that are perhaps little noticed but are ubiquitous in our immediate urban environs. These “constructions” reduced to their essence are visually composed simply of lines and joints, to the artist a symbol of a pictorial construct per se.

Pierre Faure’s works have been shown in institutional group exhibits in Winterthur, Amsterdam and Cologne as well as in numerous museums and institutions in France.

He is represented with works from various series, among others, in the collections of the Huis Marseille Amsterdam, FNAC Paris, Dresdner Bank/Commerzbank Frankfurt.

Pure structures likewise define the sculptural works by Robert Currie, which he makes into objects that are amazingly alive and energized. Born in 1976 and resident in London, Currie has for some years appeared on the art world scene with three-dimensional wall works and installations. His favorite material—besides his use of cassette and video tape—is nylon string, which he spans in precise patterns crosswise or lengthwise into Plexiglas cases. When these abstract vitrines are walked past, they generate a strong flickering sensation, and their interior body mass seems to expand infinitely. In his figurative works that seem like three-dimensional photographs, Currie applies black acrylic paint to an assemblage of nylon strings that are spanned in layers, arranged one behind the other. These works force the viewer to seek a standpoint that affords a view of the depiction in its entirety. Not till then do viewers have the possibility of perceiving them in their photographesque presence.

In the present exhibition, Robert Currie is showing completely new, freestanding objects. The geometric structures out of different colored nylon strings flow together from all sides. Whereby complex spatial drawings emerge that recall either a vortex or strict constructions.

Robert Currie studied at the Manchester Metropolitan University and at the Royal College of Art in London. In 2006 he was awarded a one-year scholarship from the London Florence Trust. In the meantime, his works can be found in many collections inland and abroad (Lady De Rothschild, Beth Rudin DeWoody, Defauwes, Simmons & Simmons) and in the public space in Frankfurt, London and Brussels.

FRAC Basse Normandie, Caen / FR
FRAC Ile de France, Paris / FR
FNAC Paris / FR
Vidéothèque de Paris / FR
UBS Basel / CH
Dresdner Bank, Frankfurt / DE
Collection Gilles Fuchs, Paris / FR
H+F Collection, Huis Marseille, Amsterdam / NL
private collections