Adel Abdessemed

Algerian artist (born 1971)
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  • Coup de tête (2012)
  • Décor (2012)

Adel Abdessemed (born 1971) is an Algerian-French contemporary artist. He has worked in a variety of media, including animation, installation, performance, sculpture and video. Some of his work relates to the topic of violence in the world.[1]

Biography

Abdessemed was born in 1971 in Constantine, in eastern Algeria, to a Chaoui Berber family. He grew up in the area of the Aurès Mountains, and attended the École régionale des beaux-arts [fr] in Batna.[1] He then studied at the École supérieure des beaux-arts [fr] in Algiers.[1] He left in 1994.[1][2]

Between 1994 and 1999, Abdessemed attended the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts in Lyon, in eastern central France. He then lived and worked in the Cité internationale des arts in Paris. In 2000–2001 he was a resident artist at P.S.1 in New York. After spending some time in Berlin, he returned in 2004 to Paris.[1] He is also a French citizen.[3]

He met his wife in a bar in Lyon called L'Antidote in the mid-1990s, an episode represented in the small replica of the venue in a vitrine in the exhibition at MAC in Lyon.

Work

If the collapse of the machine and the first Big War at the beginning of the 20th Century contributed in no small part to the establishment of an art that was suddenly provoking and difficult to look at, the availability of images from the war front in the 1990s made the same process impossible. There is little point in trying to tackle brutality by denouncing it via a series of trite statements or graphic imagery. Adel Abdessemed stated about his work «I think my work is actually positive. The world is violent – not me».[4]

Abdessemed's life-size sculptural variations of iconic images, such as the nine-year-old Phan Thị Kim Phúc (nicknamed 'the Napalm Girl') running away naked from an explosion throughout the Vietnam War in 1972 or the French football player Zinedine Zidane headbutting Marco Materazzi during the 2006 FIFA World Cup Final (Headbutt) are only two examples of how the immediacy of such moments take on fresh meaning when solidified in a form designed to make them still and everlasting. And even in those moments when the relationship between subject and rendition is a bit more fluid, as for example with the combination of the Antonio Canova-inspired sculpture group Is Beautiful with the terracotta-made, hard working men depicted in Sham, the outcome does not seem to change. This is not a literal representation of reality, but rather a sublimation of iconic images to art that takes place.[5]

Adel Abdessemed is known to have a special way to laugh. While studying art in Algeria, one of his professors defined it 'The Devil's Laugh'.[6]

Exhibitions

Solo shows

Special collaboration

Group shows

Collections

Bibliography

Catalogues

Collaborations

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Adel Abdessemed: Situation and Practice: October 11, 2008 - January 4, 2009. MIT List Visual Arts Center. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Accessed April 2017
  2. ^ [s.n.] (5 March 1994). Algerian Teacher and Son Killed At School. The New York Times. Accessed April 2017.
  3. ^ Exhibition: Abdel Abdessemed, 'Trust Me', 11 April – 7 June 2008. Glasgow: The Common Good.
  4. ^ Abdel Abdessemed
  5. ^ Adel Abdessemed, L'Antidote. Editions Beaux-Arts. 2018. ISBN 979-1-02040-423-7.
  6. ^ A meeting with Adel Abdessemed, Lise Géhenneux; Crash Magazine, 14 August 2018.
  7. ^ "Adel Abdessemed - From Here to Eternity - Exhibitions - Venus Over Manhattan". www.venusovermanhattan.com. Retrieved 18 January 2023.
  8. ^ "Adel Abdessemed: Le Vase abominable". Retrieved 31 October 2022.
  9. ^ "Adel Abdessemed : L'âge d'or". Artsy. Retrieved 31 October 2022.

External links

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