Rectangular Plate By Matthieu Gicquel
$3,726
Chairish
Géode rectangular plate by matthieu gicquel dimensions: d 21 x w 46 x h 3 cm. Materials: optical glass and gold leaf. Weight: 7 kg. Each piece is numbered. praise for the moment light shines through the glass. Details are revealed one by one: here a light bubble rises, there a changing reflection. to seek to understand matthieu gicquel’s glass art - because what we’re really talking about here is touching the senses of the material, of the work - is first and foremost to follow the path mapped out by junichiro tanizaki in in praise of shadows. For him, «[\.] we forget what is invisible to us, we regard as non-existent what cannot be seen»; yet the creator’s entire will lies in this need to reveal to us what seems absent, to give substance to the mystery from a material so common that we no longer pay attention to it. Two words-concepts of japanese origin-form the original basis of matthieu gicquel’s artistic philosophy: wabi-sabi and yûgen. The first is the powerful idea that beauty is to be found in the banal, the everyday, the vile. To the european eye, at first glance, it seems hard to grasp: what beauty is there in a chipped bowl, in pronounced wear and tear? but then\. The everyday and the commonplace contain within them the sublime. But the evidence of beauty, its subtlety, is intrinsic to the object and above all to the way it is viewed. That’s the whole idea behind yûgen: each object is a universe in itself, but it’s up to the viewer to let themselves be caught up in its mystery. At the crossroads of these two concepts, we are talking here about a meditative state, taking time, slowing down. sitting down, contemplating one of matthieu gicquel’s creations, letting yourself be carried away by a colour changing with the light, by a reflection, a ray. A glass object is a moment when the mind wanders, discovering details and minute variations. A creation is a ray of sunlight on the skin when you wake up in the morning. The work of the glassmaker is extreme formal simplicity combined with the complexity of the soul and the eye.