Fabienne Verdier

Fabienne Verdier (born 1962, Paris, France)[1] is a painter who lives and works in France.

Career

Fabienne Verdier’s artistic path has taken her through successive phases of research, all focused on her fundamental areas of interest, including the dynamism of forces of nature, the instantaneous and enduring, and movement and immobility.[2] By adopting new tools and ever-larger brushstrokes, she proposes to enable viewers to better access the infinite world of energy and transformations she extensively explores.[3]

Her latest research into the dynamics of forms has led her to explore possible links between music and painting, specifically between pictorial and sonic lines. As an artist in residence at the Juilliard School in New York City for several months, she worked with some of its foremost faculty members, including Darrett Adkins, Kenny Barron, William Christie, Philip Lasser and Edith Wiens, as well as with many students. A documentary by filmmaker Mark Kidel relating the extensive experiments carried out in Verdier’s studio-laboratory at Juilliard is expected to be released in 2016.[4]

In 2014, the Pinakothek der Moderne of Munich invited Verdier to create an installation of seven works on the theme of transformation. Entitled Mélodie du réel, it was presented at the Herrenchiemsee Palace, together with key works by German and American artists from the museum’s permanent collection.[5][6] Also that year, the city of Hong Kong organized the first retrospective of Verdier’s work: over thirty-five paintings and drawings, loaned mainly by public and private collections and covering the last thirty years of her career, were exhibited at Hong Kong City Hall with the support of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[7] Finally, 2014 saw the completion of a 13-meter-high monumental painting inside the entrance to the new Majunga Tower at La Défense in Paris. The work was commissioned by Unibail-Rodamco, under the aegis of architect Jean-Paul Viguier.[8]

In 2013, in the conceptual phase of the new National Art Museum of China (NAMOC) in Beijing,[9] architect Jean Nouvel asked Verdier to assist him, soliciting her thoughts and drawing on her knowledge of dynamism to shape a building that would transpose the simplicity, energy and power of a single brushstroke.[10]

In 2012, Verdier discovered a way to "dematerialize" her brush, leading her to develop a new technique that she called "Walking-Paintings".[11] These new works were first presented in Singapore at Art Plural Gallery. [12]The following year, Galerie Jaeger Bucher in Paris held a solo exhibition featuring this new series.[13]

In 2009, Verdier embarked on an intense period of research and painting. Long fascinated by the strength of the color spectrum but also the mystery of intriguing immobility in works by the 15th century Flemish primitives, she created a large body of sketches and paintings, drawing particular inspiration from six important works: Virgin and Child with Canon van der Paele (1436) and Portrait of Margaret van Eyck (1439) by Jan van Eyck; Death of the Virgin (c. 1481) by Hugo van der Goes; the Moreel Triptych by Hans Memling (1484); and the Simon Marmion diptych Mater Dolorosa and Man of Sorrows (c. 1460).[14][15]

The Groeninge and Memling museums in Bruges would ultimately exhibit the results of Verdier’s research side by side with their inspirations in the museum galleries. Daniel Abadie acted as visiting curator and edited a compendium entitled Fabienne Verdier, L’Esprit de la Peinture.[16] A concurrent show of Verdier’s preparatory drawings and notebooks was held at the Erasmus House museum in Brussels.[17] Fabienne Verdier et les Maîtres Flamands, notes et carnets by Alexandre Vanautgaerden was published by Éditions Albin Michel.[18]

As she was expanding her research into spontaneity, Verdier also turned her interest to early Italian frescos and specifically to Quattrocento masters. During this period, the Torlonia family in Rome commissioned her to create a contemporary fresco of monumental paintings (5m x 8m) for a reception room in the family palazzo. Her research related to the project was recorded in studio notebooks and reproduced in Fabienne Verdier, Palazzo Torlonia (2010), by Eric Fouache and Corinna Thierolf.[19]

In 2007, the Musée National d'Art Moderne (Centre Pompidou) in Paris acquired its first Verdier painting.[20] In 2005, drawn by the energy and dynamism of the works shown at Verdier’s first solo exhibition in Switzerland at the Alice Pauli Gallery in Lausanne, the Hubert Looser Foundation of Zurich commissioned her to create a series of paintings to resonate with Abstract Expressionist and Minimalist works in its permanent collection by American artists including John Chamberlain, Donald Judd, Willem de Kooning, Ellsworth Kelly and Cy Twombly.[21]

Several other museums have since included Verdier’s Looser Foundation paintings in exhibitions, including "Art of Deceleration, from Caspar David Friedrich to Ai Wei Wei," Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Germany, 2011;[22] "My Private Passion – Foundation Hubert Looser," Vienna Kunstforum, 2012;[23] "The Hubert Looser Collection," Kunsthaus Zürich, 2013;[24] and "Formes simples," Centre Pompidou-Metz, France, 2014.[25]

In 2002, following her return to France after nearly a decade of intense work and immersion in China, Verdier wrote about this apprenticeship inside a radically different system of thought. Her account, Passagère du Silence, published by Albin Michel in 2003, won several prizes, was translated into six languages and sold over 230,000 copies.[6][26]

In 1985, at 22, Verdier left for China to study at the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in Chongqing. She chose at the same time to work alongside and train with the last great Chinese painters who had survived the Cultural Revolution, whom she persuaded to transmit their mastery of spontaneous painting and aesthetic theories despite continued bans.[27][28] After becoming the first foreign woman to be awarded a post-graduate diploma in fine arts by the institute, Verdier began to progressively create her own new abstract painting.[29]

Creative Process

Fabienne Verdier’s creative process most often involves three phases.[30] First, she records her research, thoughts and observations in notebooks, sketches and inks on paper. Then she prepares the canvas by applying several layers of pigment and glaze in order to obtain the desired degree of vibration, saturation and depth of color. Finally, standing directly on the stretcher and using tools of her own invention, she shapes the paint matter to express fundamental life forces.[31]

Selected exhibitions


Solo

2015 Galerie Alice Pauli, Lausanne, Switzerland

2014 Retrospective, Le French May, City Hall, Hong Kong, curated by Daniel Abadie

2013 Galerie Jaeger Bucher, Paris, France

2013 “Fabienne Verdier, L’Esprit de la Peinture, Hommage aux Maîtres Flammands”, Groeninge Museum and Hans Memling Museum, Bruges, Belgium, curated by Daniel Abadie

2013 Art Plural Gallery, Singapore

2009 Galerie Jaeger Bucher, Paris, France

2005 Galerie Alice Pauli, Lausanne, Switzerland

Group

2014 “Formes Simples”, Centre Pompidou-Metz, France, curated by Jean de Loisy

2014 “Köningsklasse II”, organized by Pinakothek der Moderne of Munich at Herrenschiemsee Palace, Bavaria, Germany, curated by Corinna Thierolf

2013 “The Hubert Looser Collection”, Kunsthaus, Zurich, Switzerland, curated by Philippe Büttner

2012 “My Private Passion – Foundation Hubert Looser”, Kunstforum, Vienna, Austria, curated by Florian Steininger

2011 “Art of Deceleration, from Caspar David Friedrich to Ai Wei Wei”, Kunstmuseum, Wolfsburg, Germany, curated by Markus Brüderlin

2009 “Elles@Centre Pompidou”, Musée National d’Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France, curated by Camille Morineau

Public collections

Books and films

References

  1. Biography, FabienneVerdier.com
  2. Von Drathen, Doris (2012). Painting Space, Fabienne Verdier, p. 149. Edizioni Charta, Milan. ISBN 9788881588527
  3. Documentary film Formes Simples, Centre Pompidou Metz, France, 2014. Narrated by Jean de Loisy, curator of the exhibition. http://fabienneverdier.com/db/video/centre-pompidou-metz/
  4. http://www.calliopemedia.co.uk/continuing-work-with-fabienne-verdier
  5. http://www.pinakothek.de/koenigsklasseIII/
  6. 1 2 http://www.lemonde.fr/culture/article/2014/06/05/fabienne-verdier-l-infini-au-bout-du-pinceau_4432899_3246.html
  7. Abadie, Daniel (2014). Fabienne Verdier, Crossing Signs, p. 5. Editions Albin Michel, Paris. ISBN 9782226258397
  8. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wa6i4-5b3e0, film by Sylvain Bernard, published by Art Plural Gallery, Singapore
  9. http://www.lefigaro.fr/culture/2013/05/14/03004-20130514ARTFIG00235-les-tribulations-d-un-architecte-en-chine.php
  10. http://fabienneverdier.com/db/new-national-art-museum-of-china-namoc/
  11. Peppiatt, Michael (2013). Fabienne Verdier, pp. 58-75, exhibition catalogue, 25 January-9 March, Art Plural Gallery, Singapore. ISBN 9789810750268
  12. https://www.artandonly.com/fabienne-verdier-one-and-oneness/
  13. Galerie Jaeger Bucher (2013). Energy Fields, Fabienne Verdier, p. 2, exhibition catalogue, 21 September-2 November, Galerie Jaeger Bucher, Paris
  14. http://www.huffingtonpost.fr/alexia-guggemos/exposition-fabienne-verdier-maitres-flammands_b_2996535.html
  15. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJq3Wh1meiA
  16. Abadie, Daniel (2013). Fabienne Verdier, L’esprit de la peinture: Hommage aux maîtres flamands. Editions Albin Michel, Paris. ISBN 9782226246547
  17. http://www.erasmushouse.museum/Page.php?ID=3683&language=eng
  18. Vanautegaerden, Alexandre (2014). Fabienne Verdier et les Maîtres Flamands, Notes et carnets. Éditions Albin Michel, Paris. ISBN 9782226246554
  19. http://exb.fr/fr/le-catalogue/45-palazzo-torlonia-fabienne-verdier.html
  20. https://www.centrepompidou.fr/cpv/ressource.action?param.id=FR_R-4bdd1123d8caa9439b76410c9c535ce&param.idSource=FR_O-cc748ce024d377ae7d67e8b233d59bcb
  21. Büttner, Philippe (2013). Die Sammlung Hubert Looser im Kunsthaus Zürich/The Hubert Looser Collection at Kunsthaus Zurich, p. 78, exhibition catalogue, 7 June-8 September, Kunsthaus, Zurich. ISBN 9783858813985
  22. Brüderlin, Markus (2011). The Art of Deceleration, Motion and Rest in Art from Caspar David Friedrich to Ai Weiwei, exhibition catalogue, 12 November 2011-9 April 2012, Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg and Hatje Cantz Verlag, Ostfildern, Germany. ISBN 9783775732437
  23. Brugger, Ingried and Steininger, Florian (2012). Hubert Looser Collection, exhibition catalogue, 26 April-15 July, Bank Austria Kunstforum, Vienna, Austria and Hatje Cantz Verlag, Ostfildern, Germany. ISBN 9783775732352
  24. http://www.kunsthaus.ch/sammlung-looser/en/
  25. de Loisy, Jean (2014). Formes Simples, exhibition catalogue, 13 June 2014-5 January 2015, Centre Pompidou–Metz, France. ISBN 9782359830309
  26. http://www.albin-michel.fr/Passagere-du-silence-EAN=9782226141859
  27. Verdier, Fabienne (2003). Passagère du Silence: Dix Ans d’Initiation en Chine, pp. 71-123. Éditions Albin Michel, Paris. ISBN 9782846662093.
  28. http://fabienneverdier.com/db/video/master-huang-yuan/
  29. Von Drathen, Doris (2012). Painting Space, Fabienne Verdier, p. 160. Edizioni Charta, Milan. ISBN 9788881588527
  30. http://www.france5.fr/et-vous/France-5-et-vous/Les-programmes/LE-MAG-N-5-2013/articles/p-17486-Fabienne-Verdier-Peindre-l-instant.htm
  31. https://www.artandonly.com/interview-with-artist-fabienne-verdier/
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