Ernest Pignon-Ernest: Je Est Un Autre – Announcements – e-flux

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April 20, 2024

For the 60th International Venice Biennale, the Fondation Louis Vuitton has invited French artist Ernest Pignon-Ernest to present Je Est Un Autre, a unique exhibition conceived especially for the Espace Louis Vuitton Venezia. The exhibition is produced as part of the Fondation Louis Vuitton’s “Hors-les-murs” programme, which unfolds at the Espaces Louis Vuitton in Tokyo, Munich, Venice, Beijing, Seoul and Osaka, delivering on the Fondation’s commitment to bring international artistic projects to a broad audience.

The notion of “the foreigner” has been an inherent element in Ernest Pignon-Ernest’s work since he began his career in the 1960s. For this exhibition, his repertoire of migrants, itinerants, and poets has been enriched by the creation of two new faces, those of major poets, the Russian Anna Akhmatova and the Iranian Forough Farrokhzad, who together with Pier Paolo Pasolini, Arthur Rimbaud, Antonin Artaud, Jean Genet, among others form the heart of the exhibition.

Since the 1960s, and several decades before the emergence of the artforms now termed “street art,” Pignon-Ernest was already paving a singularly adventurous path, combining technical mastery, existential probity, and the ability to “poetically inhabit the world”—and doing so with exceptional openness. Throughout his career, he has accomplished the rare miracle of reconciling uncompromising ethical commitment with exacting, innovative artistic expression to the point that some of his works—such as the representation of those shot dead in La Commune and his vagabond Rimbaud—have been reproduced in hundreds of thousands of copies and have become icons of modern times. His image of the French 19th-century poet Arthur Rimbaud has, for example, in many cases, replaced the standard photograph that was previously used on covers of the poet’s works.

Everywhere and on every continent, including on the beach of Ostia where Pasolini was assassinated, Pignon-Ernest explores the destinies of individuals who break with convention or who are as myths to be revived. In doing so, the artist takes an unprecedented risk each time; the very risk that haunted Rimbaud when he persisted in “finding the place and the formula”.

The artist creates his life-sized images in selected sites and projects in everyday environments in a meaningful way, a living human presence through a strategic combination of image and site. His work is always conceived based on the potential of its interaction with a place, whose historical, mythical, or political resonances he strives to explore. He allows traces of time to meld with his work to the point of dissolving it.

To this day, Pignon-Ernest’s Parisian studio is in La Ruche, the artists’ residency founded in the early 20th century to welcome foreign artists from around the world, including Akhmatova in 1910-1911. His oeuvre has attracted the interest of artists ranging from Francis Bacon—who began compiling a file on the artist’s work in 1976, to Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and Barthélémy Toguo who has introduced his oeuvre throughout Africa through exhibitions organised by his foundation. JR, French photographer and street artist, considers Pignon-Ernest as “[his] inspiration.”

The exhibition, curated by Suzanne Pagé and Hans Ulrich Obrist, in dialogue with Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster, is accompanied by a publication bringing together numerous reproductions, comments by the artist, “Notes for Ernest” by Dominique Gonzalez- Foerster and a conversation between the artist, Suzanne Pagé and Hans Ulrich Obrist.

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