Vhils Portuguese, 1987
55 1/8 x 39 3/8 in
Plus d'images
Rather than documenting the
large-scale transformations of the city, Vhils attends to the brief, suspended
moments where Paris is traversed more than it is contemplated. The metro
becomes a particular object of study: neither entirely public nor truly private,
it is a space of forced proximity where every face encountered remains
inaccessible. This composition on ceramic tiles repurposes the familiar
aesthetic of the Parisian metro to make of it a surface of collective memory.
Fragmented faces emerge from a deep black, as if revealed by the wear of time
and the succession of passages. The treatment of the image, oscillating between
engraving, effacement and stratification, evokes both the urban walls marked by
history and the anonymous flows that daily traverse the city's underground
spaces. By playing with the visual vocabulary of Parisian stations, the work
transforms functional tiling into a narrative support, where human presences
appear, suspended between disappearance and persistence.
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