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アトリエ · 2015年設立 · フランス、パリ
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Games Whose Rules I Ignore

French mixed media artist Boris Achour explores language & social interaction through performance & installation. Known for layered works & conceptual themes.

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$ 64

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Games Whose Rules I Ignore

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合計金額

$ 64

作品詳細説明

Boris AchourBorn in Marseille, France, in 1966.He lives and works in Paris, France.Inspired by science fiction, TV sitcoms, comic books, literature, and poetry, Boris Achour draws on a broad repertoire of styles and thoughts that he appropriates and remodels through the filter of his artistic concern. Since the late 1990s, Achour began to stand out with his performance piece Actions-peu and other stagings in the public space, recording traces of these other adlib performances with no real audience except for the spontaneous passers-by. At the beginning of the twenty- first century, Achour’s oeuvre moved from the street to the film set and the exhibition space, embracing video production and sculpture while moving away from dated formats, such as the video library (Cosmos, 2001) or the traditional library–archive (The Grasshopper in the High Castle, 2013). Since 2006, his Conatus series—referencing Spinoza’s concept of self-preservation—is a sequence of designed spaces serving as stages for performances which, in turn, are recorded and translated into films. The series unfolds in different episodes (Trailer, Pilot, Joy, A Forest, Yes) and favors both minimal and hybrid forms and installations that exude vibrant shapes and colors. Ever-changing, this admirer of Fluxus increases the number of sculptures and other assemblages with frequent references to games. More recently, his Séances (2012)—comprising video, text, sound, and sculpture—is based on the perception of fragment as a primordial element to connecting with the world. In this project, image, sound, object, and setting become one, leading to a “landscape/set to be walked through” with the aim of offering the spectator an immersive experience. Sleeping characters, night scenes, obscurity: In Séances, the presence of night and sleep travels through this poetic piece in an awakened state, in a world of endless night. Games Whose Rules I Ignore is the title of Achour’s video installation at the 56th Biennale di Venezia. In the film, different participants/characters interact with objects and props, which are also displayed on a projection/ exhibition platform, thereby revealing the relationship between the two mediums. Is it an undefined ritual, a collective game with yet-unknown rules, or a tableau vivant? Achour once again opens up to us a quirky, personal, imaginary world.

アーティストの略歴

A Kaleidoscope of Connection: The World of Boris Achour

Born in Marseille, France, in 1966, Boris Achour is an artist whose work defies easy categorization. He currently lives and works in Paris, a city that seems to both inspire and reflect the multifaceted nature of his practice. To attempt to define Achour’s art through a single medium or style feels inherently limiting; he operates within a dynamic space where video, sculpture, drawing, painting, performance, and installation coalesce into something altogether unique. His artistic journey is not one of linear progression but rather an open combinatorial system—a perpetual evolution fueled by the affirmation of form, the joy of creation, and a profound need for connection.

Early Explorations: From Street to Studio

Achour’s initial foray into the art world was marked by a distinctly public presence. In the late 1990s, he began staging “Actions-peu,” performances in urban spaces that were documented through fleeting recordings, often with only spontaneous passersby as witnesses. These early works hinted at an interest in ephemerality and the unpredictable nature of social interaction. This period served as a crucial foundation, establishing a fascination with capturing traces of events and challenging traditional notions of audience and spectacle. The turn of the millennium saw Achour’s practice shift from these street interventions to more controlled environments—the film set and the exhibition space. He embraced video production and sculpture, moving away from established formats like conventional video libraries (as seen in *Cosmos*, 2001) and archival structures (*The Grasshopper in the High Castle*, 2013). This transition wasn’t a rejection of his earlier work but rather an expansion of its core concerns—a desire to explore the relationship between action, documentation, and perception.

Conatus: The Force of Being

Beginning in 2006, Achour embarked on the *Conatus* series—a body of work deeply rooted in Spinoza’s philosophical concept of self-preservation. Each episode (*Trailer*, *Pilot*, *Joy*, *A Forest*, *Yes*) unfolds as a designed space functioning as a stage for performances that are subsequently recorded and translated into films. These spaces, often minimal yet vibrant with color and form, become arenas where the artist investigates the fundamental drive to exist and connect. The series is characterized by its hybridity—a willingness to embrace both seemingly disparate elements and create unexpected juxtapositions. Achour’s admiration for Fluxus is evident in this playful experimentation, a constant expansion of sculptural assemblages and references to games that invite viewers to question their own participation and interpretation.

Fragment and Immersion: The Poetics of *Séances*

The 2012 work *Séances* represents a further evolution in Achour’s exploration of perception and connection. Comprising video, text, sound, and sculpture, the project centers on the idea of fragment as a primordial element—a building block for understanding our relationship with the world. In *Séances*, image, sound, object, and setting become inextricably linked, creating what Achour describes as “a landscape/set to be walked through.” The work evokes a dreamlike atmosphere, populated by sleeping characters and shrouded in darkness, suggesting a state of awakened consciousness within an endless night. This immersive quality invites viewers to move beyond passive observation and engage with the artwork on a visceral level.

Historical Significance and Ongoing Exploration

Achour’s work resists easy categorization, yet its influence is increasingly felt within contemporary art discourse. His 2014 installation *Games Whose Rules I Ignore*, presented at the 56th Biennale di Venezia, exemplifies his ongoing fascination with interaction and ambiguity. The film features participants engaging with objects on a projection/exhibition platform, blurring the boundaries between performance and display. Is it an undefined ritual? A collective game with unknown rules? Or simply a tableau vivant? Achour’s art doesn't offer definitive answers; instead, it opens up space for questioning, inviting viewers to construct their own meanings within his quirky, personal, and profoundly imaginative worlds. He continues to push the boundaries of artistic practice, reminding us that connection—in all its fragmented and unpredictable forms—is at the heart of human experience. His work is a testament to the power of art to challenge our perceptions, provoke thought, and ultimately, celebrate the joy of creation.
boris achour

boris achour

1966 - , France

基本情報

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Mixed Media, Performance Art
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist:
    • Science Fiction
    • TV Sitcoms
  • Date Of Birth: 1966
  • Full Name: Boris Achour
  • Nationality: French
  • Notable Artworks: ['Games Whose Rules I Ignore']
  • Place Of Birth: Paris, France