News

>>> 25.01.2021

SOLO EXHIBITION OF KENNY DUNKAN AT GALERIE LES FILLES DU CALVAIRE, from 6 MARCH to 22 MAY 2021

About

Kenny Dunkan - Keep going!
 
From 6 March to 22 May 2021 
Opening 6 March 2pm  -,6pm
 
Galerie Les filles du calvaire 
17 rue des Filles du calvaire, 75003 Paris 

CONTACTS
& DOCUMENTATION

Anais Tridon
atridon@communicart.fr
+33 1 43 20 12 11
+33 7 81 31 83 10


Main image: Kenny Dunkan, Pay Day, 2019

Image below: Kenny Dunkan, (emoji symbol for a black heart), 2020

Les filles du calvaire is delighted to announce Kenny Dunkan’s first solo exhibition at the gallery. A former resident of the Villa Medici, Dunkan envisions Keep Going! as an initiatory journey teeming with images, sculptures and videos. Drawing from Caribbean culture, fashion and design, he develops a performative and hybrid work that questions colonial heritage and fragmented identity.

Cartography of the Intimate by Simon Njami (writer, narrator, essayist).

Despite a layout that appears chaotic, bringing together fragments that constitute so many elements of a very carefully staged puzzle, intimacy is indeed what is at play here. The exhibition’s theatricality is there to surprise, destabilise, disorient. The artist moreover endorses chaos and assumes its reality by quoting Édouard Glissant: “Chaos is beautiful when one understands that all its elements are equally necessary.” But instead of following Glissant in the development he conceived of the cultures of the world, I will instead evoke the philosopher Henri Delacroix in his definition of language, which he describes as “one of the instruments that transform the chaotic world of sensations into a world of objects and representations”.

Kenny Dunkan invites us to thus explore his own intimate chaos in the form of a kaleidoscopic mise en abime. Photographs like wallpaper, albums, visual notes cover the floor and the walls, like a treasure hunt, like the most immediate illustration of its fragmentation. It is the chaos of the world of sensations evoked by Delacroix whose intimate cartography the artist has wanted to draw, in two movements, as in music: memory and identity. Memory is the Caribbean, where he is from, Guadeloupe and, by extension, the entire New World. Memory cannot be detached from history, especially that of colonisation and slavery. A history marked by branding irons and that must be rewritten, reinvented, exorcised. But there is also, perhaps more vivid and more organic, perceptive memory. This set of ruins, to use the expression of Toshomé Gabriel, from which one endlessly rebuilds, in search of a new syncretism.

This syncretism, between fantasies and memories, falls strongly within the present and its actuality. References to Amerindian hammocks, sacred sculptures and a re-examined cosmogony, profane and sacred rites. A kind of very personal cabinet of curiosities in which each object contains a meaning and delivers a piece of the story told by the artist. The body is an essential element of this installation. Like a metaphor that would tell stories  that words don’t know, as Henri-Pierre Jeudy says: “Images of the body do not concern the body as an isolated entity, they happen simultaneously as images of the world. And language only allows us to organise arbitrary classifications that will make the meaning of interpretation always hover near illusion. ” 2 

Kenny Dunkan regularly draws on the visual culture of the Caribbean and in particular on carnivals, periods of social, cultural and political role reversal, to develop a work that addresses the French colonial heritage and the persistence of its modes of representation. To achieve this, Dunkan often starts with his own black body, which he stages through different mediums, from video to performance, sculpture and assemblage. Graduating from the Ecole Nationale des Arts Décoratifs de Paris in 2014 with commendation from the jury, he won the ADAGP prize for visual arts at the Salon de Montrouge in 2015. From 2016 to 2017, Kenny Dunkan was a resident of the Villa Médicis, Académie de France in Rome. 

1 Henri Delacroix, « Introduction. L’analyse psychologique de la fonction linguistique », dans Le Langage et la pensée, Paris, Librairie Félix Alcan, 1930

2 Henri-Pierre Jeudy, Le corps comme objet d’art, Paris, Armand Colin/Masson, 1998

With the support of the National Center for Plastic Arts, Ministry of Culture and Communication.


Main image: Kenny Dunkan, Pay Day, 2019

Image below: Kenny Dunkan, (emoji symbol for a black heart), 2020

About

Kenny Dunkan - Keep going!
 
From 6 March to 22 May 2021 
Opening 6 March 2pm  -,6pm
 
Galerie Les filles du calvaire 
17 rue des Filles du calvaire, 75003 Paris 

CONTACTS
& DOCUMENTATION

Anais Tridon


+33 1 43 20 12 11

+33 7 81 31 83 10

Les Filles du Calvaire Gallery