Accumulations 1960 – 1964
Galerie Daniel Templon is holding a solo exhibition of work by French artist Arman, whose relationship with the gallery began in 1974 and continued until his death in 2005. Focusing on Accumulations, one of the best known series produced by a leading figure of the Nouveau Réalisme movement, the show features around forty historical sculptures produced between 1960 and 1964. To mark the exhibition, the gallery is publishing a catalogue with a preface by Nicolas Bourriaud.
In his quest to construct an ‘archaeology of the present’, Arman created an artistic language that had a deep-reaching effect on contemporary art, with Accumulations introducing the principle of serialization as early as 1959.
As Nicolas Bourriaud puts it, the founding tenet thus established evoked more than appropriation of the object; it spoke of the ‘catastrophe of quantity’ and ‘tragedy of abundance’.
The works are given the form of conventional paintings, their power as works of art stemming from the choice of objects, their colours and the variety of materials. The Accumulations explore the loss of individual identity and the neutralization of human interactions by consumer society, the violence of abundance and the aesthetics of rubbish, offering a ‘premonition’, as Nicolas Bourriaud terms it, of our post-industrial landscape. His pioneering work brings to mind the creations of his contemporary, Andy Warhol, while heralding the approach of a host of artists, including Damien Hirst, Thomas Hirschhorn, El Anatsui and Subodh Gupta.
Franco-American artist Arman was born in Nice in 1928 and died in New York in 2005. A founder and leading figure of the Nouveau Réalisme movement, he created a new aesthetic based on the object. A painter and sculptor known for his ‘accumulations’, he made direct use of manufactured objects. His work questions consumer society and the loss of the object’s identity, centring on two imperatives: the need to keep objects, and the need to destroy them.