Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Bottazzi Guillaume. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Bottazzi Guillaume. Afficher tous les articles

Guillaume Bottazzi aux Journées Europénne du Patrimoine

Guillaume Bottazzi aux Journées Europénne du Patrimoine, le public pourra redécouvrir un polyptyque de l'artiste qui mesure 215m² à Paris, La Défense. C'est une des première peinture abstraite  réalisée avec des techniques qui s’inspirent des grands maitres...

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Guillaume Bottazzi, exhibition in Hong Kong

Guillaume Bottazzi Exhibition

Wonderland will be displayed at Hong Kong Central Library from May 21st to June 5th2016, as a part of Le French May. Le French May is one of the foremost cultural events in Asia, with more than one million visitors each year and over 120 programs shown over the course of two months. Hong Kong Central Library is located at 66 Causeway Road, Causeway Bay in Hong Kong. 


Guillaume Bottazzi is a French visual artist whose works have been displayed worldwide, in Europe, Asia, and USA...




Guillaume Bottazzi, French May / 紀堯姆.波塔茲 - - 仙境」展覽

 French May 2016 presents the event: «  Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland  »
This event will induce visitors to evolve in an unreal world, a world which will call upon our imagination and our creativity. In front of the difficulties we are facing in our contemporary world, Guillaume Bottazzis artwork brings us pleasure and wellness.......................
「法國五月2016」隆重推出「紀堯姆波塔茲 - - 仙境」展覽
此次展覽邀請觀眾領略幻境一個需要釋放想像與創造力的世界。
面對當今世界的重重困境
紀堯姆.波塔茲的作品帶給我們愉悅與幸福引我們在他處汲取新源泉。




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Guillaume Bottazzi - French May, Hon Kong


Exposition de Guillaume Bottazzi au French May 2016, Hong Kong


Créé en 1993, Le French May est l’un des plus grands événements culturels d’Asie. Avec plus de 120 programmes présentés sur 2 mois, c’est une scène culturelle incontournable à Hong Kong, qui touche plus d’un million de visiteurs chaque année....




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“Le French May 2016” présente : « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland »

“Le French May 2016” présente : « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland »






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Guillaume Bottazzi / 香港中央圖書館, Le French May, Hong Kong

相關主題Guillaume Bottazzi, Le French May - Hong Kong
Guillaume Bottazzi / 香港中央圖書館, Le French May, Hong Kong
香港中央圖書館Le French May法國五月

這位法國視覺藝術家在公共空間所創作的作品超過40多件,其中一件高達200平方米的最新巨作就裝置在巴黎衛城,該地堪稱為法國最大的現代及當代藝術露天博物館。

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“Le French May 2016” présente l'exposition : « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland »

“Le French May 2016” présente l'exposition : « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland » 


Inédit à Hong Kong : 
Dans un espace de 565 m², la « Hong Central Library » accueillera du 21 mai au 5 juin 2016 la première exposition publique des œuvres de Guillaume Bottazzi à Hong Kong. 



                                                                               Site officiel de Guillaume Bottazzi

Guillaume Bottazzi: Inédit à Hong Kong

Guillaume Bottazzi: Inédit à Hong Kong
Dans un espace de 565 m², la « Hong Central Library » accueillera du 21 mai au 5 juin 2016 
la première exposition publique des œuvres de Guillaume Bottazzi à Hong Kong...






「法國五月2016」隆重推出:「紀堯姆.波塔茲 - - 仙境」展覽
此次展覽邀請觀眾領略幻境,一個需要釋放想像與創造力的世界。
面對當今世界的重重困境,
紀堯姆.波塔茲的作品帶給我們愉悅與幸福引我們在他處汲取新源泉。


首度在港舉辦的展覽
2016年5月21日至6月5日,
香港中央圖書館舉辦紀堯姆.
波塔茲作品在港首次公開展覽。
展館面積達565平方米。

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“French May 2016” presents: « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland »

Guillaume Bottazzi « Wonderland »

纪尧姆.波塔兹 - - 仙境

“French May 2016” presents the event: « Guillaume Bottazzi - Wonderland » This event will induce visitors to evolve in an unreal world, a world which will call upon our imagination and our creativity. In front of the difficulties we are facing in our contemporary world, Guillaume Bottazzi’s artwork bring us pleasure and wellness...





Le Nouveau Cénacle : Guillaume Bottazzi illuminates the walls

Article in Le Nouveau Cénacle, Christian Schmitt : Guillaume Bottazzi illuminates the walls
Guillaume Bottazzi illuminates the walls
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Guillaume Bottazzi, a French visual artist born in 1971, has become well-known for his many monumental “wall paintings”.
Already greatly appreciated in Japan for a giant 900 m² painting produced in 2011 on the facade of the Sapporo museum (the Miyanomori International Museum of Art), the artist was approached in December 2014 to carry out a 216 metre work at the foot of the D2 Tower at La Défense in the Parisian business district.
With this work, he has just completed his 70th work in the legendary site of what may rightly be described as the largest body of modern and contemporary art in the open air in France.
Indeed, the business district is already filled with an impressive collection of artworks as diverse and varied (sculpture, painting, stained glass windows, frescoes, etc) as the artists themselves (from Calder to Richard Serra, including Miro, Bernar Venet, Takis and César). Now there will be an additional work of art at La Défense for people to admire as they walk past the foot of the building.  The work will certainly attract and may even intrigue people.
The most fascinating and intriguing aspect of this work is the surprising, even strange distortion that exists between the apparently cold and neutral material support and the warm, almost enchanting gentleness of the compositions.
The coldness of the walls encounters the gentleness of the painting
The artist usually works on uniform fibre cement surfaces that may sometimes even be mobile (a wall on top of a wall) or a support on a rail. This was the case with the 2013 work he produced on a building in La Ciotat (near Marseilles), more specifically in the district of L’Abeille.
In general, the walls that G. Bottazzi uses are always impressive due to their monumental scale and their coldness. Yet they are never amorphous. They always radiate an internal strength relating to their materiality. Hence they often appear grave and austere, even solemn, in their power.
They often form the envelope and the shell of prestigious buildings (museums) or Business Centres (La Défense) as well as more modest residential buildings (La Ciotat). On the other hand, they all have a frontal presence: the vertical, devoid of a centre, is the obvious sign of elevation to the sacred! As a material, the wall may also evoke something dull, mute and sombre. This is the mysterious medium on which this artist works. In addition, he almost always uses scaffolding, maintaining direct and effective contact with it.
This means that G.Bottazzi can contemplate the wall constantly, following the example of Bodhidharma, known as “the wall-gazing Brahmin”, who founded Chan, the Zen of Japan. The special attraction that Japan holds for this artist is easier to understand now! The same Brahmin spent 12 years meditating in front of a wall in order to attain enlightenment, in other words perfect insight into reality. Consequently the wall we come up against, that we Westerners think of as empty of meaning, is experienced differently in reality by the Zen practitioner.
For him, the importance lies elsewhere, in the transmutation of the wall into enlightenment. Indeed, for mystics, darkness and enlightenment are one and the same thing. And, in the end, isn’t this distortion or opposition that we thought we perceived between the coldness of the wall and the pictorial warmth of the work just as absolute? Hence the other, not insignificant, question: in his own way, has the artist not also taken a path similar to that of the Brahmin?
Could this explain the clearly enlightened nature of his painting? But without the pretension of supplying a definitive, unequivocal answer, the debate will continue. In spite of this, we may say without any hesitation that this artist’s painting seems to marked by an experience comparable to that of Zen.
bottazzi_mimas_by_night
All the more since such a statement has the benefit of making the work of G.Bottazzi, more recognizable, especially the work at the Sapporo Museum (see above).
The latter resonates like a powerful, colourful hymn, full of hope and optimism, just like the bulbous shapes that are harmoniously entangled and intertwined. They surprise us, seeming to want to fly away, like Montgolfier balloons leaving the ground to soar up into the sky.
This invitation to a voyage reveals the phenomenon of transmutation that has been considered previously. A transmutation that leads to the profound transformation of one substance into another and to movement from one world to another. This confirms the statement by the psychoanalyst and anthropologist Olivier Douville, who has perceived an identical appeal, asserting that: “Large painted walls look like steamers coming towards us, inviting us on a voyage; they brighten and uplift the tones and rhythms of urban space.” In addition, as though to facilitate the same odyssey, G.Bottazzi uses his tried and tested glaze technique to soften a kind of pictorial severity and permit the voyage to be smooth.In his own words, “It brings a great deal of gentleness to the painting”. His painting really cannot be reduced solely to anecdotal detail. By giving priority to movement, G.Bottazzi quite simply includes his work in a more vast and more prestigious artistic approach, since it follows the path first taken by a certain Kandinsky.
This marvellous painter in fact chose abstract painting transformed by change and movement instead of fixed geometric shapes.
Abstraction based on movement and change
Contemporary abstraction very quickly developed two opposing trends, one based on geometric shapes and the other on organic forms.
The two approaches corresponded to two very different views of the nature of reality. The geometric abstraction that is a part of Platonic philosophy should lead to more formalist painting, to “art for art’s sake”, in accordance with the concepts of purity formulated by the American art critic Clement Greenberg. Art that is free of all forms of narration, representation and subject matter. This was the direction taken by abstraction and freely developed by the De Stijl movement with Mondrian, but it is also expressed in more static geometric works such as those of Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko.
Although Kandinsky was just as fascinated by the mystic aura of geometry, in his view abstraction revealed quite a different reality. It was based principally on movement and change and related to living things. This great painter led the way to organic abstraction.
We discover the same vision of abstract art with G.Bottazzi too, first of all in his shapes with their softened and “natural” edges; and then in those that look like living organs. The artist loves life and has no hesitation in saying so in his painting. The body is often evoked even in shapes that are allusive or simplistic such as those resembling an embryo or a foetus (see the 2008 canvas later on). In reality the painter favours metamorphoses of all kinds. They stimulate his imagination and give meaning to his art.
Nevertheless movement and rhythm remain restrained with G.Bottazzi. He always tempers his emotions.

Unlike the incisive and intrepid gestures that we find in the work of Koning or Pollock, the work of G.Bottazzi is related more to the disciplined and rhythmic work of an Oriental calligrapher. Sometimes, like many current painters, the artist blithely cross the borders between the organic and the geometric and rediscovers lost visual pleasure.
A return to Op Art and the idea of beauty
BOTTAZZI__mai_2014_web
In the 1960s, following the lead of some American painters who rejected the puritan principles of the purity of geometric abstraction, many artists joined the figures of organic abstraction.Their concern was to rediscover the joys of aestheticism. In fact all these abstract painters, such as Brice Marden, often “mix together”. Most of them go on to use organic abstraction to mark their return to Op Art. Philip Taaffe and Roos Bleckner rehabilitate a type of art that tends towards beauty. Similarly, we find an identical approach to Op Art with G.Bottazzi. In some of his works, the artist uses vibrant surfaces with the obvious aim of cultivating the “spirit of the eye” (l’esprit de l’oeil). He has no hesitation, either, in mixing the geometric with the organic for sheer pleasure!
The artist remains an ardent advocate of floating compositions that make use of all the techniques of perspective, not to mention spatial illusion, in the manner of Al Held. Hence the various evanescent patterns that often seem to be suspended in a zone of weightlessness.
In the last canvas, the artist has created an area that is just as magical, still with floating organic shapes and a perspective of depth. This results from the arrangement of the motifs that pirouette and sometimes secretively appear to conceal themselves. This gives rise to an almost unreal beauty close to minimalist austerity. But there is still one question: isn’t this need to return to beauty anachronistic nowadays?
Art currently no longer claims to enchant, since, according to Jean Cocteau, “beauty limps”! Yet Dostoevsky’s statement that “beauty will save the world has never been more true and justified than nowadays. This message is carried and idealised by artists especially who, like G.Bottazzi, enrich the world through this attraction to beauty.
Even though the nature of contemporary art is above all to question, even to shock, art will always fundamentally remain an expression of beauty related to passion.
In this respect it is useful to recall the words of Bernard Bro concerning the passion of artists: “The passion of artists is not the same as that of saints. But it’s still “passion”.
From one generation to another, it is stronger than they are and they remember that the search for beauty starts with terror, the dizziness of the solitude known to each person who enjoys their freedom. One day the person who sees that “life is worth nothing”, also discovers that“there’s nothing like life”.” (Bernard Bro, “La beauté sauvera le monde” (Beauty will save the world), pub. Cerf, 1990, p.364)

Le Niouveau Cénacle : Guillaume Bottazzi

Guillaume Bottazzi, artiste plasticien français né en 1971 s’est fait connaître pour ses nombreuses et monumentales « peintures sur parois« ...


Déjà très apprécié au Japon avec une peinture géante de 900 m2 réalisée en 2011 sur la façade du musée de Sapporo (Miyanomori International Museum of Art), ce même artiste a été sollicité en décembre 2014 dans le Business District parisien pour une oeuvre de 216 mètres au pied de la tour D2 à la Défense.
Avec elle, il vient de réaliser sa 70 ème oeuvre dans un endroit mythique qui peut être qualifié à juste titre comme le plus grand ensemble d’art moderne et contemporain à ciel ouvert de France.
En effet ce quartier d’affaires regorge déjà d’une impressionnante collection d’œuvres d’art tout aussi diverses et variées (sculptures, peintures, vitraux, fresques…) que ne le sont les artistes eux-mêmes (de Calder à Richard Serra en passant par Miro, Bernar Venet, Takis et César). Dorénavant la Défense va compter une œuvre d’art de plus et les piétons qui passeront au pied de l’immeuble auront tout le loisir de la contempler...