Yannick Desranleau and Chloe Lum Yannick Desranleau present a new immersive, site-specific installation for their solo exhibition at YYZ. The duo continues using screenprinted paper in an environmental fashion. Combined with other material, the vast expanses of colored paper use the architectural qualities of the gallery as support for the articulation of the work.
Titled Looming, this installation continues to explore the improvisational tangent that has been the characteristic of Lum and Desranleau’s later projects.
In this work, their relationship with space is not only defined by the lining of its limits/boundaries with paper and other fragile materials, but also by the setting of materials under physical stresses that will provoke, suggest or sustain physical and visual events with unpredictable outcomes, inducing a continuous decision-making process during installation.
Those intentional accidents make use of decay, collapse and failure as conceptual fire-starter. Their juxtaposition in a sentence-like sequence resolves in an open-ended formula multiplying its possible readings.
Photo credit: Allan Kosmajac
Documentation
Essay
Seripop by Emma Balkind
Looming. Defined as: A shadowy form that is large and probably threatening. An event, which is threatening to happen. A (maybe) exaggerated, vague first vision of an object in darkness. A distant dim reflection barely visible. Origins in Low German or Dutch such as lomen - move slowly. Or lemenbe weary.
Artist Bios
Yannick Desranleau and Chloe Lum
Yannick Desranleau and Chloe Lum are based in Montral and both studied at Concordia University. Their collaborative practice has spanned the fields of visual arts, music, and experimental graphic design. They have exhibited in Canada and abroad, notably at The Blackwood Gallery (University of Toronto, 2012), Muse d’Art Contemporain de Montral (Qubec Triennial 2011), Kunsthalle Wien (Vienna, Austria, 2010), BALTIC Centre for Contemporary Art (Gateshead, England, 2009), and Whitechapel Project Space (London, England, 2007). Their work is included in the collection of the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, as well as other private and public collections. Until 2012, both were part of the avant-rock group AIDS Wolf. Desranleau and Lum are represented by Galerie Hugues Charbonneau.
Yannick Desranleau & Chloe Lum gratefully acknowledge the support from de Conseil des arts et des lettres du Qubec.
Seripop (Yannick Dresranleau and Chloe Lum): Looming, 2013.