Artist Philippe Parreno is given carte blanche to curate a multi-media exhibition at Paris’ Palais de Tokyo

The French contemporary artist Philippe Parreno was handed free rein to curate a show at the Palais de Tokyo.
The French contemporary artist Philippe Parreno was handed free rein to curate a show at the Palais de Tokyo. The result is the mutli-disciplinary: 'Anywhere, Anywhere out of the World' exhibition.
(Image credit: Jonathan de Villiers)

When the Palais de Tokyo reopened in 2012 after several years of restoration work, unveiling a 22,000 sq m exhibition – almost three times its original volume – the museum's new director Jean de Loisy was intent on using it to experiment with the notion and format of exhibitions. Handing the entire space to a single artist, he believed, would be 'a fascinating confrontation to enormity'.

It is hardly surprising then that the first creative carte blanche ever extended was handed to Philippe Parreno. The French contemporary artist – profiled in our November issue (W*176) – has dedicated the past 20 years to scrutinising how art meets its audience. Through an array of media (some classical, some unconventional and lo-fi) he tends to view an exhibition as a work of art in itself. The result is the mutli-disciplinary: 'Anywhere, Anywhere out of the World'.

Faced with the labyrinth-like succession of rooms, hidden pockets and corridors of the Palais (which previously served as an archival space, an art school and even a squat), Parreno has done what he does best, bringing in specialists from various visual fields, blurring the lines between art and entertainment.

Hand in hand with movie set designer Randall Peacock and director of photography Darius Khondji, Parreno has reshuffled some of his most famous works and created something entirely new in the process.

Visitors are welcomed by a gigantic, blindingly bright neon board and flickering lights peppered through the hallway. A large nearby screen displays a film of a newborn child 'Anna' (1993), which grows abstract as you walk closer to it - a nudge, perhaps at impressionist masterpieces.

Borrowing codes from amusement parks, he has filled the rest of the space with what he likes to call 'cheap magic tricks for kids'. An electric piano installation plays the virtuoso masterpiece 'Petrouchka' by Igor Stravinsky. The following room is filled with the LED-lit 'Danny La Rue' (2013), which - hanging from the ceiling - abruptly switches on and off, suggesting a mysterious ghost town, reminiscent, perhaps of Hayao Miyazaki's child-like universe. Revolving doors slice the space in two and create secret boudoirs, unveiling a display of pieces accompanied by the sounds of Merce Cunningham's dance troupe in one room. Fake snow falls from the ceiling in a corner of the other room.

The exploration of portraiture, another theme dear to Parreno, is also in evidence. The artist has always been fascinated with the idea of generating parallel representations of people through alternative media, and the show proved no different. While robots reproduced the voice and handwriting of Marilyn Monroe ('Marilyn', 2012), glow-in-the-dark portraits suddenly reveal hidden faces ('Fade to Black', 1995), forcing the audience to scope the walls for hidden messages.

'What Philippe Parreno is giving us is a real-time experience, an expedition rather than an exhibition, a poetical journey through the Palais de Tokyo's strangeness,' said Jean de Loisy.

movie set

Working with movie set designer Randall Peacock and director of photography Darius Khondji, Parreno has reshuffled some of his most famous works and created something entirely new in the process. Pictured is 'The Writer', 2007, which shows an 18th century Jaquet Droz automaton…

(Image credit: Darius Khondji)

writing on paper

…writing, 'What do you believe, your eyes or my words'.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

A film of a new born child

A film of a newborn child, 'Anna', 1993, grows abstract as one walks closer, perhaps a nudge at impressionist art.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

conjures Marilyn Monroe through a phantasmagoric seance at the Waldorf Astoria

The piece 'Marilyn', 2012, conjures Marilyn Monroe through a phantasmagoric seance at the Waldorf Astoria, where she lived in the 1950s. Courtesy of the Pilar Corrias Gallery.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

room with sand

The temperature in the room has been lowered and a snow drift represents Parreno's impression of the point of view of the deceased Marilyn Monroe.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

stage in the rotunda

In the piece 'How Can We Know The Dancer From The Dance?', 2012, footsteps of the ghosts of Merce Cunningham's dancers can be heard on a stage in the rotunda. Courtesy of the Esther Schipper Gallery.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

Automated Doors

'Automated Doors', 2013, open and close to reveal sounds of the city, the banks of the Seine and nearby streets.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

marquees suspended from the ceiling

'Danny La Rue', 2013, features 16 marquees suspended from the ceiling that provide visual accompaniment to Stravinsky's 'Petrouchka' which acts as the score to the exhibition and can be heard throughout.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

white wall with colourful patches

Glow-in-the-dark posters depict Parreno's abandoned works that fade away and only reappear once exposed to light in 'Fade to Black', 2013.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

way to piano throve staircase

First commissioned by Parreno and Hans Ulrich Obrist for an exhibition in Manchester, Liam Gillick's 'Factories in the snow', 2007 acts as a temporal marker, providing a musical score. Playing Stravinsky's 'Petrouchka', the pianos are used as an instrument for measuring time and change sequence according to each display.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

black piano

Performed by Mikhail Rudy, the only living pianist able to play the piece with two hands as opposed to the usual four, the music is echoed throughout the exhibition.

(Image credit: Aurélien Mole)

ADDRESS

Palais de Tokyo

13 Avenue du Président Wilson, 75116 Paris, France

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