Press Release

“Sea levels will rise, experts warn, and it’s not going to stop.”
—LA Times, August 27, 2015

The sea level can be used as a supposedly stable reference to measure altitude, but, in reality, it is a fluctuating point of reference as its value varies with time and space. While sea level fluctuations often hit newspaper headlines, raising alarm of coastal areas being submerged, they remind us above all of the elusive nature of any point of origin. More than just the coast, rising water levels engulf any claim for the ‘original’.

The fluidity of shapes and their inevitably temporary nature are central to the new paintings presented by Jean-Baptiste Bernadet, partnered with sculptures by Benoît Platéus. Initiated during a residency in Los Angeles during the spring of 2015, Bernadet’s Black Paintings reintroduce the artist’s earlier use of the color black. While the title of the series refers to Ad Reinhardt’s black monochromes, Bernadet’s paintings function differently from those of the American artist. Each work is composed of a diluted mix of black paint and another color, which the artist applies on the canvas and then spreads with a sheet of paper. The liquid mixture slides on the support and rapidly dries, thereby revealing variations in the density of the black. Despite requiring great speed in the making process, Bernadet tries to render his gestures unreadable. The resulting image is therefore not expressionist—it does not reveal anything of the subjectivity or the intention of the artist—although it does include random marks that the observer can freely interpret. In opposition to the silent and motionless nature of the American painter’s works, the French artist offers paintings whose fluid and mobile surfaces generate an endless game of interpretation. In the interlacing of the paintings, landscapes emerge only to immediately vanish.

Facing the paintings, Benoît Platéus’ sculptures also function as carriers of images. Since 2011, the artist has been gathering empty containers that used to hold chemical products needed for photographic printing (fixer, developer, etc.). He pours pigmented resin into these containers and as the resin hardens, the layers of color blend unpredictably, creating abstract effects in the material. Similar to the chemical process of photographic printing where ‘something’ appears, the jugs seem to contain latent images. Considering the horizontality of the layers of color, the transportable nature of the containers, and their resemblance to gas cans at times, Platéus’ hybrid objects—part volume and image, part sculpture and photography—call to mind the same register of landscape as Bernadet’s Black Paintings. In this respect, the fact that the sculptures presented here were also created in California may be meaningful as the two artists took a trip there together, traveling between the national parks of the American west.

However, beyond this shared thread, it is above all the importance given to incompleteness and potentiality that brings together the work of both Bernadet and Platéus. Their pieces, marked by the gesture for one and by the cast for the other, appear as sensitive surfaces, open to projections, and, in their essence, multiple and elusive.

- Devrim Bayar


Jean-Baptiste Bernadet was born in Paris in 1978, and works in Brussels. His work has been shown in many monographic and group exhibitions in such institutions as: WIELS (Brussels), Almine Rech (Paris), Maison Particulière (Brussels), and Palais des Beaux-Arts (Brussels).

Benoît Platéus was born in Chênée (Belgium), and lives and works in Brussels. His work has been shown in many monographic and group exhibitions in such institutions as: WIELS (Brussels), S.M.A.K. (Ghent), La Maison Rouge (Paris), Mu.ZEE (Ostende), Etablissement d’en face (Brussels), and Jeu de Paume (Paris).

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About the Artist

Jean-Baptiste Bernadet’s references range across a broad spectrum of art historical precedents, from Monet, Vuillard and Munch in the past to Joe Bradley and Josh Smith in the present. Like his forebears in colour painting, Bernadet uses the ways that colours, and their interaction, both activate the senses and allow the viewer to reflect back on the nature of that sensory activation, something which we realise in conditioned by both us and the artist being products of a certain time and place.

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Also Exhibiting at Almine Rech

About the Gallery
Almine Rech opened its doors on April 1st, 1997 in the 13th arrondissement in Paris. The gallery was founded on a minimal and conceptual axis, representing artists such as James Turrell, John McCracken and Joseph Kosuth. In addition to its stable of internationally recognised, mid-career and emerging artists, it has always been the gallery’s mission to continually seek out and include new artists in its programme. The gallery has held longstanding relationships with artists like John McCracken and James Turrell and has since started working with and representing artists such as Günther Förg, Alex Israel, Jeff Koons, Richard Prince, Julian Schnabel, Taryn Simon and DeWain Valentine, among others. In 2006 the gallery moved to a larger two-floor space in the Marais district and in 2008 inaugurated a second 1,000 square metre exhibition space in Brussels. In March 2013, Almine Rech launched its new Paris space at 64 rue de Turenne. In June 2014, Almine Rech opened a gallery in London on Savile Row, Mayfair. In October 2016, the gallery moved from Savile Row to a larger space on Grosvenor Hill, Mayfair. The 400 square metre gallery opened with a solo exhibition by Jeff Koons. Almine Rech Gallery also opened in Manhattan’s Upper East Side—the gallery’s first exhibition space in the US—at the end of October, 2016. The New York gallery’s inaugurating exhibition was Calder and Picasso.
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London 11 Savile Row, 1st Floor, Mayfair
Almine Rech
11 Savile Row, 1st Floor, Mayfair, London, United Kingdom
+44 207 287 3644
http://www.alminerech.com
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