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Paris : Taryn Simon, an opening, open to all

Preview

We have published Taryn Simon several times in our editions of October 27th 2011 and May 7th 2012. Her first exhibition in France, in Paris begins tonight (5.30pm – 8.30pm) at Galerie Almine Rech. If you are in Paris you readers of La lettre are invited.

The Almine Rech Gallery presents the new series A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I-XVIII. This powerful, elaborately constructed photographic work was produced over a four-year period (2008–11), during which the artist travelled around the world researching and recording bloodlines and their related stories. In each of the chapters that make up the work, the external forces of territory, power, circumstance, or religion collide with the internal forces of psychological and physical inheritance. The subjects Simon documents include victims of genocide in Bosnia, test rabbits infected with a lethal disease in Australia, the first woman to hijack an aircraft, and the living dead in India.

A Living Man Declared Dead is divided into 18 chapters. Each chapter is comprised of three segments. The first segment is a large portrait series systematically presenting individuals directly related by blood. The sequence of portraits is structured to include the living ascendants and descendants of a single individual. Simon also shows empty portraits, representing living members of a bloodline who could not be photographed. The portraits are followed by a text panel, in which the artist constructs narratives and collects details about the distinct bloodlines. She also notes the reasons for the absences in the portrait panel, which include imprisonment, military service, dengue fever, and women not being granted permission to be photographed. The last segment is Simon’s “footnote” panel, comprising images that expand and locate the stories in each of Simon’s chapters.

According to Roxana Marcoci, curator at MoMA for the Department of Photography, “Simon’s major project locates photography’s capacity to at once probe complex narratives in contemporary societies and to organize the material in classification processes characteristic of an archive, a system that connects identity, genealogy, history, and memory.” Her collection is at once cohesive and arbitrary, mapping the relationships among chance, blood, and other components of fate. In contrast to the methodical ordering of a bloodline, the central elements of the stories—violence, resilience, corruption, and survival—disorient the highly structured appearance of the work. A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I-XVIII highlights the space between text and image, absence and presence, and order and anarchy.

Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters I-XVIII – Taryn Simon
Almine Rech Gallery
From May 25th to July 28th, 2012
19 rue de Saintonge
Paris 75003
t: +33 (0)1 4583 7190
f: +33 (0)1 4570 9130

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