You are here

Didier Courbot

Country:

City:

Categories:

Date: 
Thursday, 2 February 2017 to Saturday, 18 March 2017
Opening: 
Thursday, 2 February 2017 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm

Didier Courbot

2 February to 18 march 2016

Please join us for the opening on Thursday, 2 February from 6 to 8 p.m.

Didier Courbot is working. Continually. He will work for two years on something that he will complete in five minutes. If you like, call him lazy. Yet, there is more good intention towards the public in this strategy than anything else. And lightness too. And the superficially simple questions: How does art work? What makes it possible? How can it stand in front of you? The latter is a question of fragility. And like the question ‘why do we breath?’ it can be found in everything that surrounds us.

In his upcoming exhibition at Susan Hobbs Gallery, a new corpus of work will illustrate these subjects and method of practice. Characteristically, Courbot works with what remains: the domestic scraps of marble table tops, odd pieces of wood, leftovers of paper after a model or rudimentary sculpture is made. Here, extending from his Table Work series, plinths and stands are presented as themselves. Some display a thing; some are empty. A blur of sculpture as a definition. Other works, made from thin brass, play with a series of hand-drawn posters that are themselves offered as pre-sculpture. Within each, a series of reduced geometric shapes in primary colours can be cut-up to form a variety of three-dimensional, cone-shaped volumes. However Courbot complicates this relationship to replication by supplanting mechanical apparatus with physical action; he describe how “rather than duplicating the multiples with a machine—in this case a printer—I wanted to be the machine.”

Artist ( Description ): 

Paris-based Didier Courbot was born in Hazebrouck (Nord), France in 1967, and studied at the Ecole regionale des Beaux-Arts in Dunkerque. His work has been broadly exhibited in Europe, including recent exhibitions at Maison Revel – Centre de ressources du Pôle Pantin Métiers d'Art, Pantin, France; Fondation Fernet-Branca, St. Louis, France; Les Rencontres d’Arles Photographie, Marseille, France; Museum of Modern Art, Moscow; John Tevis Gallery, Paris; La Maréchalerie centre d’art contemporain, Versailles, France. As well, he has recently exhibited at SCAI THE BATHHOUSE Gallery, Tokyo and Access Gallery, Vancouver.

Telephone: 
416.504.3699
Venue ( Address ): 

Susan Hobbs Gallery is open to the public Wednesday to Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and by appointment. The gallery is located at 137 Tecumseth Street, Toronto.

For more information about this exhibition or the Susan Hobbs Gallery, please give us a call at (416) 504.3699 or visit www.susanhobbs.com.

Other events from Susan Hobbs Gallery

view
lenticoolers: Oliver Husain & Malik McKoy
04/15/2023 to 04/20/2023
view
Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky: The Pool in the Shell
03/02/2023 to 04/08/2023
view
Yan Wen Chang: Odile’s Notorious Magnum Opus Of Thirty-Two Fouettés, Katie Bethune-Leamen: Pickle Fingers
01/19/2023 to 02/25/2023
view
Together / Apart
12/03/2022 to 01/14/2023

Pages

 

Related Shows This Week

view
FRANCESCA CASADEI “primitivo intimo collettivo PRIMITIVO PAGANO INTIMO”
03/25/2023 to 04/02/2023
view
Entanglement: all life is life. ||| Ruth Owens
02/25/2023 to 04/08/2023
view
GHP Artists Exhibition
03/17/2023 to 04/21/2023
view
Riad Miah: My Eyes Just Heard My Brain
03/09/2023 to 04/01/2023
view
Neither Here Nor There
03/18/2023 to 04/15/2023
view
Everything Changes ||| E2 – Kleinveld & Julien
02/25/2023 to 04/08/2023
view
Playtime
02/14/2023 to 05/26/2023
view
The Lost Planet: Natalia Kapchuk solo exhibition
03/04/2023 to 05/01/2023

Pages