Second Body

The major exhibition of Antony Gormley’s sculptures at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is a continuation of his conception of the exhibition as a physical and psychological test site.

Antony Gormley, <i>MATRIX II</i>, 2014, 150 sheets tannic blackened Rebar, 550 x 1500 x 750 cm
The exhibition at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris continues the artist’s investigation of body and space, interrogating the body as place and architecture as the primary conditioner of our experience of space.
Antony Gormley fully exploits the scale and volumes of the former foundry sheds that now form the gallery, catalysing our experience of space and time through works that either constitute or are arranged as “fields”. In a recent statement, the artist describes being “increasingly interested in the tropes of framing, containing and constructing being freed from architecture’s shelter function… to make a psychological architecture that allows surface and mass, light and dark, open and closed volumes free play in works that become places for an adventure in real time.”
Antony Gormley, <i>Expansion Field</i>, 2014. 60 sculptures in 4 mm, corten Steel
Antony Gormley, Expansion Field, 2014. 60 sculptures in 4 mm, corten steel
The first work in the exhibition and the sole occupant of the first gallery is a four-metre-high model of a house as a body. This work objectifies and internalises the relationship between a perceiving human body and its habitat by mining and perforating the normally closed bodyvolumes using the languages of cells, corridors, shafts and windows, presenting the subjective body as a mansion of many chambers.
This idea of the transmutation of the anatomical body into interconnected cells is continued in the second gallery space with the installation Expansion Field. The sixty sculptures that constitute this piece are arranged in four rows; a totalised environment constructed in Corten steel sheet from expansions of over twenty fundamental body poses. Each work has been evolved by applying regular increments of expansion to each of the constituent cells of a particular body stack. Together the group of sculptures form a field similar in appearance to the repeated units of a minimalist installation or the rows of megaliths at Carnac.
Antony Gormley, <i>Expansion Field</i>, 2014. 60 sculptures in 4 mm, corten Steel
Antony Gormley, MATRIX II, 2014, 150 sheets tannic blackened rebar, 550 x 1500 x 750 cm
In the largest and highest space in the exhibition another field is installed. Here, well over lifesize cast iron stelae immerse viewers in a forest of totemic presence, in which they are invited to intuit somatic gestalts evoking a variety of emotions, from resistance to delirium.
The final work in the exhibition, Matrix II, is made specifically for the fourth space of the Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Pantin. It is virtual architecture, a three-dimensional drawing that identifies sixteen room-sized volumes that interconnect around a void space equivalent to two adjacent standing bodies. Using re-enforcing mesh, the skeleton of cast-concrete buildings, Matrix II interrogates the form and structure of the human habitat. This work reveals itself to the gaze of an ambulatory visitor and invites visual penetration, while denying physical access. The challenge of distinguishing foreground, mid-ground and background in the multiple layers of mesh is a vertiginous optical task. As the viewer circulates around the work it creates a disorientating perceptual field in which figure/ground relations become inverted and the accelerating effects of compressed perspective confuses the eye.
The effect of each of these works displayed through the four halls in Pantin is to disorientate the viewers and invite them on a journey of auto-observation. “Second Body” is a continuation of the artist’s conception of the exhibition as a physical and psychological test site.
A bilingual catalogue in English and French with texts by the American choreographer William Forsythe, the art historian Guitemie Maldonado and a conversation between Antony Gormley and Hans Ulrich Obrist accompanies the exhibition.

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