Tue, Feb 14, 2017
JR, the celebrated French artist, will be the subject of a major retrospective show in Qatar to be held by Qatar Museums at Qatar Museums (QM) Gallery Katara in Doha from March 9 to May 31, 2017.
JR is amongst a handful of world-renowned artists who combine art and engaged actions through large-scale outdoor installations, films, photographs and videos, using the streetscape as his canvas and his inspiration, which he claims as the largest art gallery in the world.
JR creates “Pervasive Art” that spreads uninvited on the buildings and slums around Paris, on the walls in the Middle East, on the broken bridges in Africa or the favelas in Brazil. He remains anonymous and doesn't explain his work, allowing the subjects, protagonists, spectators and passers-by to raise their own questions.
JR – Retrospective will feature some of the key series that have made the artist famous around the world as well as a video lounge where selected video works can be viewed.
Among his best-known projects are:
Face 2 Face (2007): As part of his long running international campaign, Portrait of a Generation, JR illegally pasted on both sides of the separation wall and in several Palestinian and Israeli cities with large portraits of ordinary citizens with the same occupation of both ethnicities and religions, forcing the viewer to question who each individual person was and whether a difference could be made.
Women Are Heroes (2008): A project that showcased poignant and powerful portraits of physical and emotional survival amidst atrocity, documenting the dignity of women in conflict zones and violent environments.
The Inside Out Project (2011): Launched in March 2011 at the TED Conference in California, JR called for the creation of a global art project in which everyone could participate – the Inside Out Project – inspired by his large-format street “pastings”. Individuals and groups from all over the world could take part, using photographic portraits to share the untold stories and images of people in their communities within more than 130 countries from now on.
Ellis (2015): A film directed by JR, starring Academy Award winning actor Robert de Niro, set in the abandoned Ellis Island Hospital complex and using JR’s Unframed art installations, telling the forgotten story of the immigrants who built America.
Rio de Janeiro Olympic Games (2016): Describing it as his ‘craziest’ project yet, JR covered the streets of Rio with giant art installations representing Olympic athletes, each turning the city into their own personal playgrounds.
The Louvre, Paris (2016): JR was invited by the Louvre to transform one of the most recognisable aspects of the world-renowned museum: making the famous pyramid ‘disappear’ in plain sight through a spectacular anamorphosis, an illusion that covered the entire structure.
Among his other recent projects are an exhibition dedicated to children at Centre Pompidou in Paris; a permanent collaboration with Brazilian artist Os Gemeos in the hidden underground tunnels of the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, and a documentary film co-directed with Nouvelle Vague icon Agnes Varda, travelling around France to meet people and discuss their visions.
Qatar Museums has done pioneering work in the Middle East to bring art out into the streets and into public spaces, notably commissioning the Tunisian artist, El Seed, to create one of the biggest art installations ever – works on a huge scale for the motorway tunnels in Doha, which El Seed called Calligraffiti, and Richard Serra’s breath-taking East-West/West-East, which is found in Qatar’s desert, spans over a kilometre in length and consists of four steel plates which rise to 14.7 m and 16.7 m above the ground.
Born in France in 1983, JR is based in Paris and New York. Beginning his artistic career at the age of 17, JR joined the Galerie Perrotin in 2011. Since then, JR creates monumental photographs that he pastes around the world, infiltrating in urban life anonymous portraits, witnesses of the present and the past. He received the prestigious TED Prize in 2011 that offered him to make a “wish to change the world”.
JR exhibits freely in the streets of the world, catching the attention of people who are not typical museum visitors. People who often live with the bare minimum discover something absolutely unnecessary. And they don't just see it, they make it. Some elderly women become models for a day; some kids turn artists for a week. In that Art scene, there is no stage to separate the actors from the spectators.
This exhibition at QM Gallery Katara is made in collaboration with Galerie Perrotin.
Solo shows of JR’s work have been exhibited in galleries and museums worldwide, including The Rath Museum in Geneva (Switzerland), Tokyo’s Watari Museum (Japan), The Contemporary Art Museum in Dallas (USA), The Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati (USA), the Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden (Germany), Power Station of Arts in Shanghai (China), and “Au Panthéon”, Paris (France) a monumental installation surrounds the drum of the Pantheon’s dome until the end of its renovation.
-
Size matters: art records in 2014
Fri, Jan 2, 2015 -
$101m sculpture was top buy at Sotheby’s in 2014
Fri, Jan 2, 2015 -
Christie’s Indian art sale fetches $12.09 million
Sat, Dec 13, 2014 -
Christie’s to sell top Indian modern art
Wed, Dec 10, 2014 -
By George! Thanksgiving Proclamation worth millions is sold
Wed, Dec 3, 2014 -
Famous Matisse work expected to fetch $19m
Sun, Nov 30, 2014 -
Street art engages viewers in debut expo
Sun, Nov 23, 2014 -
Red hot ruby sells for record $6.8m
Mon, Nov 17, 2014 -
Whopping $853m art sale sets a new world record
Thu, Nov 13, 2014 -
Rare Egyptian works included in modern art sale
Tue, Nov 11, 2014 -
Abu Dhabi sheds light on Guggenheim collection
Thu, Nov 6, 2014 -
Rare, blood red ruby expected to fetch $9m
Sat, Nov 1, 2014 -
Collectibles ‘can outperform mainstream assets’
Tue, Oct 28, 2014 -
$3.4m price tag set for rare Ferrari
Sun, Oct 26, 2014 -
Dubai watches sales clocks up new record
Thu, Oct 23, 2014