
Recently honoured by a major exhibition at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon, entitled Empreintes, French painter François Rouan is now the subject of a new show at Galerie Templon in Paris. Nearly twenty major works unfold an oeuvre that can be rediscovered, in the words of Alfred Pacquement, as “possessing a density and depth rarely encountered along the pathways of contemporary art.”
From the outset, Rouan was associated with the Supports/Surfaces movement, though he never adhered to it fully. His singular approach led him to deepen the pictorial gesture through collage, and, from 1965 onwards, through the invention of weaving (tressage). In the 1980s, his exploration of new media – photography and film – prompted him to broaden the field of painting, deconstructing traditional pictorial structures in order to reinvent them.
The exhibition brings together primarily paintings from the Transis and Recordas series. In the former, executed in wax, forms emerge from within reiterated motifs like vestiges of memory, transforming each work into an apparition, a kind of indelible shroud. In the latter, Rouan meticulously weaves fragments of canvas, producing a surface both literal and symbolic. Colours interlace with intensity; forms recur with stubborn insistence, even as the painted surface persistently unravels. Nothing reveals itself at first glance: the work demands a patient, ever-renewed engagement.
Through this interplay of borrowed elements and imprints, François Rouan composes an oeuvre of pronounced palimpsest character – what Daniel Sibony has described as a “magnificent meditation on the texture of existence.” This formal and spiritual rigour situates him among the foremost abstract painters of modernity.
François Rouan has recently been entrusted with the creation of new stained-glass windows for the refectory of the Abbey of Fontevraud.
Courtesy Templon



The gallery was founded in 1966 by Daniel Templon, who was then only 21. It first opened rue Bonaparte, in Saint-Germain-des-Prés in Paris, before moving in 1972 to its current location, rue Beaubourg, in the Marais, close to the Pompidou Center, which opened in 1977. Daniel Templon first gained recognition by exhibiting conceptual and minimal artists such as Martin Barré, Christian Boltanski, Donald Judd, Joseph Kosuth, Richard Serra. In the seventies and eighties, Daniel Templon was one of the pioneers of the contemporary art and introduced many important American artists to the French public: Dan Flavin, Ellsworth Kelly, Willem de Kooning, Frank Stella, Andy Warhol. The gallery quickly became one of the references in contemporary art in France. In 1972, Daniel Templon and Catherine Millet co-founded the monthly art magazine ART PRESS.

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