Geometries of the Invisible

27 september • 03 january 2020

Opening • Sunday, September 27 at 11 a.m

Curators :
Fabienne Grasser-Fulchéri and Pascal Pique

Castel Gallery

media partnership
30 years at eac. ! season

ARTE

Le Monde

Les Inrockuptibles

Beaux-Arts Magazine

Le Quotidien de l'Art

Slash

Toutelaculture.com

Agora fm

La Strada Magazine

Artists : Art Orienté Objet, Bernard Aubertin, Basserode, Charley Case, Dadamaino, Philippe Deloison, Philippe Durand, Vidya Gastaldon, André Hemelrijk, Yves Klein, Julije Knifer, Arthur Lambert, Jean-Luc Leguay, Sol LeWitt, Sandra Lorenzi, Ingeborg Lüscher, John McCracken, Myriam Mechita, Mario Merz, Anika Mi, Matt Mullican, Aurelie Nemours, Jean Perdrizet, Isabelle Perú, Irina Quinterne, Olivier Raud, Vera Röhm, Reiner Ruthenbeck, Vladimir Skoda, Teruhisa Suzuki, Günther Uecker, Sandra Valabrègue, Victor Vasarely

With the participation of the compositeur Michel Redolfi

And the evocation of Michel Ange, Jérôme Bosch, Léonard de Vinci, Albrecht Dürer, Hubert et Jan Van Eyck, Paul Klee, Hilma af Klint, Emma Kunz, Le Corbusier, Kasimir Malevitch, Piet Mondrian, Francis Picabia, Rembrandt…

 

Geometry and abstraction play a fundamental role in contemporary art – and the whole history of art from when the very first geometric lines appeared in caves with prehistoric drawings to the very latest works which draw inspiration from this form of abstract understatement.

What is the basis for this phenomenon and what is the reality behind it?

What is the invisible common thread linking geometry and abstraction across the ages and across cultures and forms of expression? 

It appears that many forms of abstraction, based on certain uses of geometry, bring into play dimensions associated with cultures of the Invisible which are seldom given any consideration and remain largely unrecognised. And yet, this would seem to be a fundamental constant throughout the entire history of art. 

This exhibition Géométries de l’Invisible explores this hypothesis as it deals with a dual subject that is still little discussed in contemporary art and in Western thinking about art: namely that of the major role which cultures of the Invisible have played and continue to play in artistic production through geometry and abstraction which are one of the vehicles for it. There will be particular focus on the question of energy dimension in works of art that are designed using certain geometric patterns shape and colours. 

With participation encouraged, there will be an experimental and creative aspect to the Géométries de l'Invisible exhibition. By creating a succession of situations through which visitors interact with the active or immersive principles used by the artists, the way in which the public relates to exhibitions and artworks can be overturned.