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Photo of the Week

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Even art-loving dogs had to wrap up during the recent cold snap in Paris. Photo: Eric Tenin of Paris Daily Photo.

 

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Paris Update Fashion Flash

FRENCH MICHAEL MOORE TAKES ON
NATIONAL FOOD INDUSTRY

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The motto of Le République de la Malbouffe: "Opacity, Obesity, Precarity."

Xavier Denamur, the owner of five small restaurants in Paris, is a man on a crusade. It began with the 2009 decrease in value-added tax from 21.6 percent to 5.5 percent on restaurant meals, which he says favored big chain restaurants without helping the small independents as promised. Going beyond that issue, he blames French government policies and a lack of transparency in the food industry for the increasing industrialization of food preparation and delivery, the degradation of food quality in France, and increasing obesity and public health costs. One of his campaigns calls for legislation that would create a label informing restaurant customers whether the food is prepared from fresh ingredients on-site or is factory-made or frozen.

Denamur has formed an association called La République de la Malbouffe (The Republic of Bad Food) and has just released a documentary film of the same name, directed by Jacques Goldstein. Unfortunately, the film lacks focus and does not get his laudable message across clearly. Shown only in a handful of Paris cinemas, it is also available on DVD (with issue no. 17 of Rue89 magazine, for €5). Denamur continues to hold debates and chase politicians, hoping to get them to listen to his call for transparency. “My goal is to get citizens interested in politics again,” he says, by encouraging them to vote and write to their representatives. Heidi Ellison

 

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Paris Update Art Notes

ANDREAS SLOMINSKI


Recent works by Andreas Slominski at the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris (through February 29). Video by Nikolaï Saoulski. Click here for larger screen.

 

Paris Update This Week's Events

For full details about an event, click on its name to visit the official Web site (in English when available).

Festival Circulation(s)

> Festival promoting the work of young European photographers, Bagatelle Garden, Bois de Boulogne, Feb. 25-March 25

Leonardo Live

> Filmed tour of the Leonardo da Vinci exhibition at the National Gallery in London, various cinemas, Paris, Feb. 16.

London Calling

> Festival of British films, Forum des Images, Paris, through Feb. 29.

Nouveau Festival

>A "cross-disciplinary" festival at the Centre Pompidou. Free admission. Feb. 22-March 12.

Paris Fine Art

> Art and antique fair, Palais des Congrès, Paris, through Feb. 20.

Robert Altman Film Festival

> Cinémathèque Française, Paris, through March 11.

Salon International de l'Agriculture

> A barnyard in Paris, with the best of the country's livestock and products made from them, Feb. 19-27

Steven Spielberg Film Festival

> The entire œuvre, Cinémathèque Française, Paris, through March 3.

Touts-Petits Cinéma

> Film festival for kids from 18 months to 4 years, Forum des Images, Feb. 18-26.

 

 

Art

 

Buy Sellf / Retour vers le Futur

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bordeaux block party

Mathieu Mercier's "Lampe Double Douille" (1999). Buy-Sellf, CAPC. Courtesy of the artist


The city of Bordeaux kicked off its second annual Block Party, a celebration of contemporary art, last Friday with openings in museums and galleries all over town. The centerpiece of the event was two new exhibitions at the CAPC Musée d’Art Contemporain de Bordeaux, housed in the spectacular spaces of a former warehouse built of the local blond stone.

“Retour vers le Futur” (“Back to the Future,” through May 16) shows off the work of members of a highly active local collective of artists, Buy-Sellf, which has banded together with other associations of urban planners, graphic artists and other cultural players to create the Fédération Pola, with a shared locale and administration. The entertaining exhibition at CAPC focuses on past and new works by Buy-Sellf members, some of whom have made their names in the contemporary art world.

The running backdrop for the show is Anita Molinero’s “apocalyptic” wall of orange-painted polystyrene, which appears from its many blowtorch burns to have withstood a recent war. Fire crops up in a number of other works as well, including Tony Matelli’s amusing installation “The Old Me” (2008), in which studio photographs of the smiling artist are being burnt yet not destroyed by a perpetual flame.

Another artist, Laurent Perbos, plays with light by letting a rainbow fall to the ground and refracting its colors through broken glass, creating a sinuous rivers of sparkling colors. Stéphane Vigny stretches light by substituting neon tubes for normal light bulbs in an old-fashioned chandelier, entitled “Lustre” (2007).

Other works play with architectural forms, among them Simon Boudvin’s subtle “Rois Tectoèdres” (2009), which use anastylosis, an archaeological technique for reconstructing ruined monuments, to create three little geometric forms of sand that are highly evocative in spite of their extreme simplicity.

The second exhibition, “CAPC, or Life in the Grip of Art,” (through Sept. 19) consists of works chosen from the museum’s 30-year-old collection and the collection of the FRAC (Fonds Régional d'Art Contemporain) Aquitaine by an outside curator, Aurélie Voltz, a young Frenchwoman who lives in Berlin. She opens the show with an intriguing piece by Christian Boltanski, who seems to be ubiquitous in French museums these days. His “Inventory of Objects Once Belonging to a Girl from Bordeaux” (1973-90) is one of his more interesting conceptual pieces. The artist placed an ad in a local paper seeking a young woman willing to donate all her belongings for a work of art. Someone actually responded, and Boltanski organized all the paraphernalia of her life by function and carefully arranged two hundred items in vitrines with labels, as if in an ethnological museum: furniture, makeup, bathroom products, underwear, photo albums, clothing, etc. The result is a fascinating yet chilling summary of one messy life reduced to neatly arranged objects deprived of their meaning by being separated from their owner, yet representing her and a specific time at the same time.

Taking inspiration from this piece, Voltz set up the entire exhibition as if it were in a folk museum with collections representing different aspects of life. Each room has its theme: the ages of life, rivers, fields, religious imagery, legends and oral traditions, arms, etc. We find among the varied pieces chosen early works by now-famous artists, including drawings by Miguel Barceló, a photo by Diane Arbus and installations by Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and Joseph Kosuth. Alongside them are more recent works by up-and-coming young artists and works by artists who may be forgotten today.

A third exhibition, “Kiss the Real” (through April 18) consists of a series of paintings by young artist Johann Milh, who actually painted them in the museum – he was allowed to use various spaces in the building as his studio since he didn’t have one of his own. He has created an architectural mise en scène for them that goes well with his stark paintings of skateboarders caught in moments of anguish against angular architectural settings.

Heidi Ellison

CAPC Musée d’Art Contemporain de Bordeaux: Entrepôt Lainé 7, rue Ferrère, 33000 Bordeaux. Tel.: 05 56 00 81 50. Open Tuesday-Sunday, 11am-6pm (8pm on Wednesday). Admission: €5. www.bordeaux.fr/ville/capc

More reviews of Paris art shows.

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