Absalon

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Meir Eshel (Absalon) was born in Israel in 1964. Upon his arrival in Paris, in 1987, encouraged by his uncle Jacques Ohayon, teacher at the art school in Cergy-Pontoise, to give room to his artistic needs, he enrolled in Christian Boltanski’s workshop at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts. When he started to work with the Chantal Crousel gallery in Paris in 1990, he moved to a studio in Boulogne, built by Le Corbusier for the artist Jacques Lipchitz in 1924, provided by his other uncle and mentor, François Lasry.

Between 1991 and 1994 and influenced by a radical and orderly aesthetic, in search of the essential vital space between humans, Absalon created his Cellules (cells) as small architectural forms which evoke monastic cells and relate to the dimensions of the artist’s own body and mental space. These constructions were necessary for Absalon to live in an environment he both was attracted to, and wanted/ needed to resist. The form of Absalon’s Cellules is reminiscent of the modernist architectural styles of Le Corbusier, Bauhaus, De Stijl and the Russian constructivism.

For his first video work, Proposal for a Habitat, Absalon - coming from a culture and environment with its own vital needs (desert, nomadic life) - in search for modernity, undertakes to analyse the utility of the objects we today are surrounded with, and to explore a new furniture that responds to an essential, frugal way of live.

At the age of 29, Absalon died of AIDS in Paris, in October 1993.

During his short career, Absalon exhibited in important institutions like the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris (1991) and took part in dOCUMENTA IX (1992). The Musée d'art moderne de la Ville de Paris (1993). KunstWerke in Berlin (2010), IVAM in Valencia and CAPC in Bordeaux (both 2021) dedicated key exhibitions to his work.

Nos expositions

Personnelles Collectives

Exposition collective

Bande à part

22 juin — 27 juillet 2013


Exposition collective

Intérieur jour

4 — 28 septembre 2012


Exposition collective

Leçon Zéro

10 septembre — 29 octobre 2005

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