If you are fortunate enough to be in Paris this Thursday night you can attend the book signing at jeu de paume of She, Lise Sarfati's new bookwork with text by Quentin Bajac chief photography curator Musée d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou.
Quentin writes: A family album preserves only carefully selected photographs. Out of an
entire life, it stores only handpicked moments, privileging special
occasions, happy ones usually, and consigning the rest to oblivion:
happy faces, relaxed moments, places of leisure rather than work. It
tends to underline a group’s social links and affective relations, to
highlight an identity, a communal spirit, a shared life and destiny. The
portrait of the couple or group, with all its attendant conventions, is
one of its inescapable figures. The family album tries to register the
evolution of a particular human community, to write its story and scan
the passage of time with each succeeding page. None of this figures in
She: instead of a chronology, time is stopped, it appears to stammer and
bite its own tail. There is no group photo or desire to stage a
collective destiny, but only isolated models and individuals who do not
seem to communicate amongst themselves, or only barely; no happy moments
or picturesque places, only indifferent moments in ordinary places; no
strong gesture, none of the conventional poses, and no complicity with
the photographer. The models pose, but reservedly, more often than not
without looking into the camera. And even when we do see their faces, we
don’t really seem to see them. They are here, but they are always also
there, elsewhere. When we close the book and think a bit about it, we
cannot but see She as the anti-family album par excellence.
jeu de paume, 1 place de la Concorde, 75008 Paris
Twin Palms Publishers
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