Narrative Figuration was never proclaimed as a movement as such. It grew out of the initiative of art critic Gérald Gassiot-Talabot and artists Bernard Rancillac and Hervé Télémaque who worked together in July 1964 to set up the exhibition Mythologies quotidiennes at the Paris Museum of Modern Art.

At a time when Pop Art was triumphing at the Venice Biennale (Rauschenberg was awarded first prize for painting in June 1964) and generally making its presence felt in Europe, Mythologies quotidiennes brought 34 artists (Arroyo, Bertholo, Bertini, Fahlström, Klasen, Monory, Rancillac, Recalcati, Saul, Télémaque, Voss…) who, like their American counterparts, put contemporary society and its images at the core of their work.

A few months later, the Salon de la Jeune Peinture was disrupted by the mass arrival of young artists (Aillaud, Arroyo, Cueco, Recalcati, Tisserand…) who had set themselves the goal of making art once more a tool for social change. Narrative figuration was a powerful force, attracting painters from very different artistic and geographical backgrounds in the 1960s (those mentioned above, but also Adami, Erró, Fromanger, Stämpfli, la Coopérative des Malassis…) who, working from images taken from photography or film, advertising, comic strips or even classical painting, produced works which twisted the original significance of these images and gave them unexpected meanings, suggested other narratives and highlighted their political implications.

Over these years, Narrative Figuration set itself apart from the social neutrality of the Paris school and the formalism of American Pop Art and denounced all forms of alienation in contemporary life. The effervescence of the late sixties led the most militant painters in the movement to take an active part in politics and, in particular, in the events of May ‘68 in Paris.
Hotel Paris
El caballero español, Eduardo Arroyo, Centre Pompidou, ADAGP, Paris 2008, © Photo RMN

The exhibition, which can be seen as the best way to remind the public of the inventiveness of these founding years, reconstitutes the creative environment of these works, which were sparked by the cultural and social ferment of the sixties. Following a dynamic circuit focusing on the major themes common to most of these artists, the exhibition is divided into clearly separate sections:

1) The Origins of Narrative Figuration (Prémices)
2) The exhibition Mythologies quotidiennes (1964)
3) Objects and Comic Strips
4) The Art of diversion
5) Painting is a Detective Novel
6) A politic figuration
Hotel Paris
Here's all the essential information for the Narrative Figuration exhibition at the Grand Palais in Paris

When: 16th April - 13 July 2008
Where: Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, 3 avenue du Général Eisenhower, Paris 8th arrondissement, métro Champs-Élysées-Clemenceau (lines 1 & 13). Bus n°s 28, 32, 42, 49, 72, 73, 80, 83 & 93
Opening hours: Wednesday 10am-10pm, Thursday - Monday 10am-8pm. Closed Tuesdays. Closed 1st May. 17th May, for the Nuit des Musées, open from 7.30-11.15pm and free!
Admission: adults 10 euros, concession 8 euros, free for under-13s
Official site with more info: here


Agrandir le plan