Thomas Vauthier

What grows, regardless of everything, regardless of us

Plaster sculpture, Photographic edition | 2022

This series took the form of a photographic investigation aiming to collect particular forms of co-existence of vegetal elements with their urban contexts. The forms of urban vegetation that interest me are those that manifest a certain impermanence. This impermanence is synonymous with fragility because of their provisional development and their sometimes harmful status. These informal forms are indeed in danger: whether it is by a pure and simple weeding, urban redevelopments, or reconstructions. With this series, I wish to make visible these precarious forms of life which are the symbol of a vital survival within the ruins, the rejects, and modernity. A plaster sculpture, depicting a 鉢植え (hachiue, potted plant generally in front of urban house), was also placed in a 床の間 (tokonoma, traditional alcove) in the manner of a 生け花 (ikebana, flower arrangement).

ARTIST

Thomas Vauthier

Thomas Vauthier was born in 1993 in Paris. After studying architecture, he joined the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, in the Photo / Video department (2013-2018). He is interested in the limits that circumscribe the notion of art-privileging the potentials of artistic practice rather than the production of artwork – which he explores through the concept of de-work. His practice unfolds around three axes: collective and performative events, urban photographic surveys, digital paintings.Since 2018, he has been developing, within the EUR ArTeC and as part of his Ph.D. at the University of Aix-Marseille, a new research axis around Japanese socially engaged artistic practices (art projects, アートプロジェクト). Thomas Vauthier is currently carry out a study stay in Japan, at the Tokyo University of the Arts, with the support of the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT research grant).

< 前の作家

作家一覧

次の作家 >

作家一覧

Art Exhibition “Cultural BYO…Ne!”

Report  JP | EN

Art Exhibition “Cultural BYO…Ne!”
Report

JP | EN