Mathieu Briand: Galerie Maisonneuve.
Too, Jian-Xing
"Mr. and Mrs. Briand, the bakers of the 'accursed
bread,' have left town on a pilgrimage to Lourdes."
"These inhabitants of Pont-Saint-Esprit ate the bread.... Some had
to be locked up in padded cells for several days." "Mrs. Payen
was the last to recover.... She sometimes still suffers from
delirium." A 1951 copy of Paris Match, opened to a sensationalist story on a mass poisoning by bread made from grain infected with ergot (a parasitic fungus found in rye and wheat), lay on a table in Mathieu
Briand's "Prologue" to the ten-chapter project
"Ubiq: A Mental Odyssey." Offering keys to what is to come,
this prologue was a re-creation of Briand's studio: a diverse
collection of objects on four tables pushed up against one side of the
gallery, with small paintings, notes, photocopies, and found objects on
the wall space above.
The Briands of Pont-Saint-Esprit are not relatives of the artist,
but that they allegedly sent the town on a bout of hallucinations and
flashbacks is notable. Indeed, Mathieu Briand is fascinated by LSD, a
semisynthetic derivative of ergot. Standing beneath a round loaf hung on
the wall like a rustic ornament, flasks, test tubes, and petri dishes
evoked the chemical process. Near the Paris Match, a tacky, miniature
grotto with a fountain sheltered some sugar cubes (containing LSD?),
recalling the Grotto of Massabielle, which the Pont-Saint-Esprit bakers
undoubtedly visited in Lourdes, as well as Leonardo's The Virgin of
the Rocks (shown in overpainted photocopies hung midway along the wall).
Also featured was a fifteenth-century engraving of a manually powered
grain mill; on the table below was a wooden model based on it. But where
the engraving shows one central wheel, the model had two, visually
echoing nearby pictures of the double-ringed space station in Stanley
Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. This melding of the past and the
past's future reappeared in the form of three open paperbacks glued
together in a triangle: Philip K. Dick's Ubik, Jorge Luis
Borges's Tlon, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius, and Alain Robbe-Grillet's
Project for a Revolution in New York. Briand's "studio"
bred countless such interconnections, exploring conflicting perceptions
of reality, displaced viewpoints, and temporal leaps and lapses.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Galerie Maisonneuve has committed its entire exhibition space to
Briand's epic from January 2007 through January 2008. Drastically
stretching out the time frame of an exhibition is surely a strategy to
short-circuit market conventions that are wearing thin. The
pervasiveness of young galleries vending small, craftsy drawings of
feigned naivete and of big galleries cranking out gargantuan, loud,
densely trashy yet conspicuously expensive installations suggests a
prevalent belief that galleries should aim for their market niches.
Maisonneuve is a young gallery in a medium-small space that is working
big in the only way it can: through time. Briand's eleven-part
odyssey is bound to be gargantuan, but it also stands to gain from a
logic that runs counter to the instant gratification of a single
outburst. His task, for the time being, is to keep viewers coming back
for the next chapter the way a good novel keeps readers reading on.