The Louvre Offers Visitors a Dense and Luminous Installation by Joseph Kosuth
Written by Daniele Burge Saturday, 24 October 2009 20:58
PARIS.- Sentences written in French using neon tubing are suspended along the walls of the medieval Louvre. Joseph Kosuth, a major figure of the contemporary international art scene, temporarily lays claim to the excavated ancient Louvre, offering visitors a dense and luminous work. The influential American artist Joseph Kosuth is widely regarded as a leading proponent, and one of the founders, of conceptual art, a movement which emerged in New York in the 1960s. His work considers art to be the production of meaning and thus the idea, or concept, becomes the defining component of a work of art, often eliminating the materiality of the art object altogether.
Since the mid-1960’s, Kosuth’s work has focused on the connections between
words and things, between language and representation. As his
work is conceptually based and not media defined, he employs various strategies
for his work, from photos with common objects or neon tubing (Centre Pompidou
Collection) to texts sandblasted in stone (Champollion Monument, Places des
Écritures, Figeac).
Kosuth creates installations with texts, often monumental in size, usually comprised of quotations from different sources: literature, philosophy, anthropology, among others. His public works, as well as works in most public and private collections, can be found in most countries in Europe, The United States and Japan and elsewhere. Joseph Kosuth’s most recent installations include a project on the Isola di San Lazzaro for the Venice Biennale in 2007 and another at La Casa Encendida in Madrid in 2008.
This time, the artist has decided to work in the moats of the medieval Louvre and to write on the old walls of the medieval palace, encouraging the visitor to rediscover this mysterious, underground space.
The title of this installation, "Neither Appearance nor Illusion" ("ni apparence ni illusion") is taken from a quote of Friedrich Nietzsche. The installation’s fifteen sentences, distributed in various positions along the walls, suggest a quest both experiential and introspective. They play on the complex relationships between history, archeology and the role of the visitor to complete the work themselves. The artist, an originator of appropriation and well known for the use of texts and quotations of others for his works, has decided in this case, and for the first time since 1979, to construct the texts himself.
‘Fifteen stones in place, all out of shadow, these lit words make visible both the viewer and the viewed. The wall, the passage’.
The Musée du Louvre website presents its new multimedia publication, which enables the visitor to discover a variety of artworks displayed in 3D exhibition rooms.
Explore and gain a unique insight into the works of art displayed. The first issue of this publication is a tribute to Fragonard, one of the greatest French painters of the 18th century, and also one of the first curators of the Musée du Louvre. Visit : http://www.louvre.fr/llv/commun/home.jsp
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