Arena Qatar Section
Sub Section
On Art
Fluid Steel Bernar Venet talks about some of the work featured in his first solo show in the Middle East, an exercise of opening the artistic field to new visually and conceptually original statements.
STEELY MEANING French conceptual artist Bernar Venet; right: a sculpture from the Angles series
52
IN HIS GRIB series of sculptures, French conceptual artist Bernar Venet bends steel to suit his short-lived whims. The tough metal melts and molds itself along his feverish scribbles; however his artistic voice is one that defies staying inside a line. His brand of concrete art ruthlessly subverts the natural world and creates a new lexicon. In an earlier interview Venet once said, “The world is intrinsically devoid of meaning, foundation and finality, so how could it be any different for art?” “No one can define what art is and what its goals are,” Venet tells us now. “The concept of art is an open one. We have to constantly be prepared for new creations, new entities which will contribute to extending this category called aesthetics. The paradox is that in order to make art one must each time move beyond the domain of art.” It is in this pursuit that he turned to the rigid language of mathematics to flesh out more intangible concepts. “I don’t use mathematics as a substitute for other artistic models. I use it
T Qatar: The New York Times Style Magazine
because in addition to the particularities attributed to it, it is a way of enriching the artistic sphere with a different approach to the world and possible mental phenomena.” In the New York of the late 1960s, in the throes of what Venet calls his “so-called ‘conceptual’ period”, he sought to take the position of monosemic symbols of mathematics to extremes. Even today, he says, with his sculptures he draws upon the extension of that basic concept. “My objective is to limit the interpretational possibilities to ensure that my work is perceived in its actual physical reality,” he says; a “real object in a real world”. So much so that his sculptures all have their dimensions engraved on the material in order to explain more precisely the very nature of the work being presented to the viewer. At the entrance to Custot Gallery Dubai, where Venet’s solo exhibition has just concluded, a monumental Corten steel, 6.45 meter-high Arc sculpture was installed. It was to be a foretaste of his new and recent steel sculptures from the Arc, Indeterminate
IMAGES COURTESY BERNAR VENET
BY AYSWARYA MURTHY