PRESENTATION: Éric Baudelaire-Death Passed My Way and Stuck This Flower in My Mouth

Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt GallenPressing issues of the present form the thematic material for the productions by the Éric Baudelaire who was awarded the Prix Marcel Duchamp› in 2019. Baudelaire’s research-based practice is informed by his interest in an artistic language probing a reality molded by systems of representation that structure contemporary societies and our individual experience. For the exhibition, Baudelaire creates a spatial video installation and other works in which the flower – real and metaphorical – serves as a starting point for exploring the human condition in this moment of global crisis.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen Archive

The centrepiece of the multi-channel film in the first part of Éric Baudelaire’s exhibition “Death Passed My Way and Stuck This Flower in My Mouth” is set in Europe’s largest refrigerated building where 46 million flowers, flown in from farms in Africa and South-America, are sold at auction every morning. Work in the hangar is filmed in a hypnotic form of visual anthropology that is at once seductive, because flowers can be beautiful, and terrifying, because the scale of this globalized trade is ecologically troublesome. The documentary sequences are framed by the presence of a fictional observer who roams the streets at night, inspired by a character in a short play by Luigi Pirandello, “L’Uomo dal Fiore in Bocca” (1922). The flower, which also gives the show its title, refers to an epithelioma: a tumour that was an incurable disease at the time Pirandello wrote the play. The protagonist, feeling death upon him, projects himself through conversations with strangers into the minute details of a world he observes intensely as a way of escaping his pending fate. Pirandello’s play serves Baudelaire as a backdrop and point of departure to create a narrative structure in which our relationship to the world and its finitude is explored.  Fleeting moments and cyclical processes form a grid in the exhibition. The ephemeral lifespan of the flowers contrasts with the seemingly endless mechanical cycle of the market, a sign of vulnerability inherent in nature and society. Statistical data collected during the pandemic, which Baudelaire translates into sculptural wax reliefs, extend his formal explorations, creating a loose poetry of flowers, pending catastrophes, disease and economic processes while raising the question of their representation. By projecting images that shape our perception of reality onto various planes, Baudelaire allows us to make our own network of connections, not as the illusion of a whole, but as fragmented, painful and lyrical layers.

Photo: Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen

Info: Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, Davidstrasse 40 , St.Gallen, Switzerland, Duration: 11/9-28/11/2021, Days & Hours: Tue-Fri 12:00-18:00, Sat-Sun 11:00-17:00, www.kunsthallesanktgallen.ch

Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen
Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen

 

 

Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen
Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen

 

 

Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen
Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen

 

 

Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen
Éric Baudelaire, A Flower in the Mouth (Videostill), 2021, © Éric Baudelaire, Courtesy the artist and Halle Sankt Gallen