Tarek Lakhrissi

This Doesn’t Belong to Me

3 October 2020 – 13 December 2020

Guarene

Tarek Lakhrissi
This Doesn’t Belong to Me

curated by Bernardo Follini

3 October – 13 December 2020
Palazzo Re Rebaudengo (Guarene, Piazza Roma 1)

Opening of the exhibition Saturday October 3 2020, 2 – 6.30 pm
Palazzo Re Rebaudengo (Guarene, Piazza Roma 1)

Reservation is required please click here to book your visit or send an email to biglietteria@fsrr.org

In this eighth year of collaboration with ENSBA Lyon – École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo hosts the first Italian solo exhibition of Tarek Lakhrissi, participant artist in the 2020 Post-Diplôme promoted by ENSBA.

“This Doesn’t Belong to Me” presents a cycle of newly commissioned works the artist conceived specifically for the spaces of Palazzo Re Rebaudengo in Guarene (CN). The exhibition explores the concept of self-defence, interpreted as a practice of resistance developed by different social groups and subaltern bodies in order to survive. The image at the core of this cycle of artworks is that of the salamander: since Medieval bestiaries, this amphibian is said to be endowed with venom and able to survive among flames. In the show, the salamander becomes a symbol for counterpower, of both a political and sexual nature, which in performing self-defence rewrites the rules of conflict and connection. Autotomy – or the self-amputation of non-vital body parts, practiced by certain animals as a diversion for their predators – becomes the defensive tactic identified by Lakhrissi to imagine new strategies of urban guerrilla.
The exhibition path of “This Doesn’t Belong to Me” begins with a ceiling installation composed of silver chainlets – talismans for protection in everyday life, which are also reminiscent of the instruments of pleasure employed in BDSM practices. The following room portrays a deferred scene, in which the conflict or intercourse has already taken place. The space is populated by a group of five sculptures in the shape of grotesque, out-of-scale salamander tails, which create a dream-like scenery evocatively dominated by the element of fire. The environment suggests a tension between visibility and absence, where the body is assumed as a platform continuously under construction and deconstruction, rather than an inalienable identity structure. In Lakhrissi’s representation, self-defence is a process of disidentification, the “strategy for survival and subversion” mentioned by José Esteban Muñoz. But more than that, it is a counteroffensive action, similar to the one described by Elsa Dorlin in her Se défendre: une philosophie de la violence [Self-defence: A philosophy of violence] (2018): “a different semiology of the militant body, which doesn’t rely on the exemplary nature of its own martyrdom, but rather on the relentless and inevitable nature of its revenge – that doesn’t belong to the metaphysics of purposes, but rather to the immediacy of a strike”.

The exhibition is realised with the support of Fondazione Nuovi Mecenati, French-Italian Foundation devoted to supporting contemporary creations.

Tarek Lakhrissi (1992, Châtellerault, FR) is a visual artist, poet and writer based in Paris. In his practice he investigates and challenges language and reflects upon the codification of affects through fiction and worldmaking. His works have been exhibited internationally: 22nd Biennale of Sydney; Museum of Contemporary Art of Sydney (2020), Auto Italia South East; London (2019), Hayward Gallery; London (2019), Grand Palais – FIAC; Parigi (2019), Fondazione Gulbenkian; Parigi (2018), Lafayette Anticipations; Parigi (2019), La Galerie; Noisy-Le-Sec, Francia (2019), La Gaité Lyrique; Paris (2018), CRAC Alsazia; Altkirch, Francia (2019), Artexte ; Montreal, Canada (2017), SMC/CAC; Vilnius (2017), Kim? ; Riga (2018), Wendy’s Subway; Brooklyn (2017), Zawya; Il Cairo (2019), Espace Arlaud; Losanna (2019), Zabriskie; Ginevra (2019). He is nominated for the 22nd Fondation Pernod Ricard Prize (2020-2021)

Ensba lyon

Photo: MS. Bodl. 764, fol. 55r. Salamanders, in flames., Francia, | Photo: © Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford.