Ajax loader

Christian Milovanoff - Mesopotamia, from the series Attraction, 2011-2012.

Christian Milovanoff

In his brand new work, Attraction, Christian Milovanoff plays a strange game based on reproducing his own archives and deconstructing them, and also on the idea of pure photographic recording, which he will also unpack and transform. Collecting images of the world, whether made by him or not, is no longer sufficient. What's important is to ascribe meaning to this raw material.

To organise, sort through, index, choose, cut, file, mount, juxtapose, oppose, bring closer, harmonise, unroll, work on, align, sequence, deploy, permute, re-cut, link up, repeat, telescope, space out, formulate, place, displace, replace, duplicate, glue, blow up or shrink This is how Attraction was born and how it patiently constructed itself.

Christian Milovanoff makes his own the Jean-Luc Godard formula: "Editing, my most precious concern". For him, this means making images resonate with each other and observing what happens. To associate them, put them one on top of the other; to observe through a negative both sides of a newspaper page, to shoot the resulting splice (and, if nothing happens then, start again with different lighting, different composition—or simply give up on that attempt).

To archive, frame, copy in order to organise "what is seen"; to impose order on the chaos of what is visible through narratives in which fiction draws on documentary and vice-versa... The titles Christian Milovanoff confers on each of his "attractions" are keys with which to unlock and grasp the poetic, political enigma of the editing process: "The South", when it's the skeleton of an automobile resting in the planet's lower hemisphere; "Mesopotamia", wherein aeroplanes fly over a map showing the archaeological sites of Assyria—or else, more lightly but with no less efficiency, "Four-four-two-one", in which a single image highlights two footballers accompanied by their own shadows.


P-L R.


Exhibition produced with the collaboration of the Musée Réattu.


http://www.museereattu.arles.fr/attraction,-christian-milovanoff.html

Christian Milovanoff

Courtesy of the artist.


Christian Milovanoff

Born 1948 Nîmes

Lives and works in Paris and Arles.


Oil paintings in the Louvre, in Paris, and in the Staatsgalerie of Stuttgart; classical Rome, offices, supermarkets, Assyrian bas-reliefs, the city of Pittsburgh: these are only some of the subjects Christian Milovanoff has been shooting for over thirty years. The terms copy, frame, archive, document, narrate, are all watchwords of his part-documentary, part fictional work—as if he were using them to try and bring organisation to the chaotic visible. As well as exhibitions and books featuring his photographic work (in particular The Louvre Revisited, The Imagined Gallery, Conversation Pieces, Suites), he has written articles on documentary film (“The Sequestered” about Frederick Wiseman, “Drops of Honey” about the work of Johan van der Keuken, “Ordinary Voices, the commune of Peter Watkins”; also “Of Formal Necessities” on the actor Claude Simon, and “Halving the Face”, or “Le dédoublement du visage”, about Claude Lévi-Strauss). He has also written two works of fiction: Le Jardin 1948-1968 (The Garden), and L'Ordre (The Order).

Musée Réattu

> 14 October

10 am to 7 pm

7 €

Special price for pass holders

Free for the exhibition of Christian Milovanoff

Concessions for all the museum : 3 €


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