Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art I
Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art II
Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art IV
Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art VI
Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art VII
Chefs d'oeuvres de l'art III
Chefs d’œuvre de l’art VII
Le Goût du néant
Le Sens de l'Histoire ou la Grande Réduction
Modèle ruiniste
Monument Ordinaire I
Monument Ordinaire II
Monument Ordinaire III
Monument Ordinaire IV
Monument Ordinaire V

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art I
2016
diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art II
2016
diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art IV
2016
diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art VI
2016
diptych, framed pictures
153 x 98 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvre de l'art VII
2016
diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d'oeuvres de l'art III
2016
diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Chefs d’œuvre de l’art VII

diptych, framed pictures
203 x 113 centimeters
Unique

Seven photographic diptychs and one photograph from the series Chefs-d’oeuvre de l’art combine iconic objects that seem to be remnants of lost civilizations, as in a collage. The title of this series of works is a direct reference to the covers of a magazine published by Hachette in the 1960s, whose ambition was to inventory and popularize 40,000 years of human production. The greatest “chefs d’oeuvre” which the publisher chose to feature on the covers were placed over red, green, yellow or blue backgrounds, compositions reminiscent of pop art. The aspiration to offering a scientific inventory gave way to graphically attractive images transforming artefacts of ancient or lost civilizations into true media icons, “like a Pop Art piece featuring a Callipygian Venus instead of Jackie Kennedy”, as Théo Mercier suggests. By applying the same principle and reactivating the same aesthetically-charged gaze on distant or lost civilizations, he shows how the past is constructed and deconstructed according to unpredictable historical events and to selections made by one civilization after another. Sculptures, masks and artefacts, most of them anthropomorphic, are displayed side by side on the exhibition walls, evoking “a great gallery of ancestors where Men face other Men in their deadly humanity”, according to the artist. While the sculptures in the centre of the exhibition are ready to fade into the depths of history, the ghosts in the photographic diptychs seem to be witnesses to their own disappearance.

Like small pebbles on a path allowing us to reach some of these civilizations, climbing holds – imitations of nature for artificial walls – metaphorically encourage visitors to attempt a dangerous climb.

With Panorama Zéro, in a way, Théo Mercier revives the oracular function of artists and poets by mapping the buildings and the ruins of past, present and future civilizations, without naming them. He thereby suggests that they are what makes humankind unique.

Théo Mercier

Le Goût du néant
2016
amphora, plaster, tire, wood
240 x 110 centimeters
Unique

Le Goût du néant unfolds as a landscape of sculptures consisting in unstable combinations of  heterogeneous objects – ancient objects and contemporary objects, originals and reproductions: an antique amphora, imposing 18th-century ceramic jars, a Mesopotamian vase, stone cannonballs, spheres, a column capital, a tyre, etc.

Théo Mercier is a virtuoso for creating precarious balances and paradoxical relationships of scale. The bases, whose usual function is to support and protect sculptures, now seem to threaten them – a new answer to the central question of the relationship between a sculpture and its base. Contradicting the idea that sculpture is a perennial medium, Théo Mercier creates unstable, fragile, dystopian works, mostly doomed to disappear, like so many monuments to the glory of collapsing: “time-dismantling machines”, in his own words.

Théo Mercier

Le Sens de l'Histoire ou la Grande Réduction
2015
plaster, wood
40 x 80 centimeters
Unique

Le Sens de l’histoire ou la Grande Réduction is a collection of six reproductions of the head of Hygeia, an ancient Greece masterpiece from the National Archaeological Museum of Athens representing the Greek goddess of health. The six casts of this female marble face replicate it on various scales. They are arranged on a shelf in order of size, which emphasizes their differences. The biggest of these heads, from the museum shop in Athens, is probably closest to the original, while the others are scaled-down copies, replicating the model less and less precisely and less and less closely as their size diminishes. Reproduced over and over again to stock the souvenir shops of Athens, the serene and harmonious face of the goddess becomes tangibly distorted with the repeated duplications, suggesting a “distortography” of the divine, according to the artist, the same way that time kicks history around.

Like a collector, Théo Mercier has collected these objects and given them a base; by gathering them, he places these disparate objects on a path going from the sacred to the profane, and traces a great journey through history, going from a pantheon to a contemporary museum of Athens, from archaeology to souvenir shops.

Théo Mercier

Modèle ruiniste
2016
render, plaster, wheels
190 x 60 centimeters
Unique

Théo Mercier

Monument Ordinaire I
2016
ceramic, stone, wood, wheels
210 x 60 centimeters
Unique

Théo Mercier

Monument Ordinaire II
2016
ceramic, plaster
200 x 60 centimeters
Unique

Théo Mercier

Monument Ordinaire III
2016
ceramic, plaster, stone
220 x 70 centimeters
Unique

Théo Mercier

Monument Ordinaire IV
2016
stone, plaster, wood
180 x 90 centimeters
Unique

Théo Mercier

Monument Ordinaire V

steel tube, ceramic, plaster, stone
207 x 40 centimeters
Unique