Djamel Tatah
By (Author) Emmanuelle Brugerolles
Text by ric de Chassey
Text by Danile Cohn
Text by ric Mzil
Actes Sud
Actes Sud
1st November 2018
France
General
Non Fiction
Hardback
176
Width 220mm, Height 280mm
1110g
A unique look at the works of Djamel Tatah and those of the minimalist artists in the Lambert Collection. Djamel Tatah's refined paintings reveal the way in which humanity can assert itself as a presence in the world. From reality, ordinary life and world events, the artist paints life-size figures which seem to be suspended in time, set in unspecified places and caught up in a world of silence. Reinterpreting solitude as virtue, Tatah intends to surpass reality, experimenting with colour, light and line to explore his feelings of being part of the world. This catalogue creates a dialogue between the collection's minimalist artists such as Robert Barry, Robert Ryman, Robert Mangold, Richard Serra, Sol LeWitt and Brice Marden, among others, and Tatah's sober refined life-size figures, which somehow seem suspended in time and detached from the world. The artist draws inspiration from everyday situations or major news events to create a metaphysical representation of contemporary man. While Djamel Tatah's work shows a clear relationship with modernist and contemporary monochrome painting, it is also part of a more classical tradition. Hence, the Paris School of Fine Art (ENSBA), where has taught since 2008, has loaned over fifty works from its own illustration collection, works by Delacroix, Matisse, Corneille de Lyon, Cimabue, Giotto, Piero della Francesca, and more, with a view to broadening the dialogue with Djamel Tatah's work over time.
Emanuelle Brugerolles is Curator of Drawings at the cole Nationale Suprieur des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France. ric de Chassey is professor of contemporary art at Franois Rabelais University in Tours, France. Danile Cohn holds a chair for philosophy at the University Paris I - Panthon Sorbonne and is director of the laboratory for Culture, Aesthetics and Philosophy of Art (CEPA).