- 5
Valentin Carron
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Description
- Valentin Carron
- The Whirling Tribe (Copper) leaves the Humble Forest
- styrofoam, fiberglass, acrylic resin, acrylic paint and varnish on canvas
- 144 by 194 by 7cm.; 56 3/4 by 76 1/2 by 2 3/4 in.
- Executed in 2012.
Catalogue Note
Valentin Carron is from Switzerland, a country of deeply rooted traditions. His work explores those
traditions, probing how they function in an age of increasingly globalised
consumerism. He takes symbolically charged images and wittily reformulates them to expose their originality – a word that now sounds rather hollow
in our globalised world. Carron uses art in an intelligent way to challenge traditions, expose their identity and
connect them with life today. It turns out, for example, that the Alps were ‘invented’ around 1900, when
Switzerland profiled itself at the World’s
Fair and struck a chord that launched the tourism industry. In the 1930s and
1950s the Swiss went a step further
inventing what Valentin Carron calls
‘Heidiland-style’. Sentimentally or not, he unravels, investigates, and dissects this style in search of its ironic
core. He reconstructs the special, artfully manufactured glass walls with which wealthy Switzerland got such
an attention back in the 1950s. His goal is to remove the very last veil of
sentimentality and give the viewer a
cool, analytical version of reality - art as analysis.