Part round table, part live performance, a multidisciplinary debate with works of contemporary art and design staged in an experimental dispositif, 2019
From an original idea of Samuel Bianchini and Emanuele Quinz, developed by the Reflective Interaction research group of EnsadLab, the laboratory of the École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs (EnsAD), PSL University, Paris.
Scenography designed and directed by Samuel Bianchini, with Adrien Bonnerot and Pernelle Poyet (object design), Annie Leuridan (light design), Sylvie Tissot (software engineering), and Brice Ammar-Khodja (video). Realization of the table and its utensils: Atelier H2.
This project is supported by La Chaire Arts & Sciences of École Polytechnique, École Nationale Supérieure des Arts Décoratifs – PSL, and the Daniel and Nina Carasso Foundation. The research on new forms of interactive light writing is carried out in partnership with the “Dynamic Light” project led by Concordia University (Montreal) supported by Les Fonds de Recherche du Québec.
The first iteration of Dissect has been performed at the Centre Georges Pompidou as part of the Behavioral Matter symposium on March 29th, at 8:30 p.m. Programmed in parallel with the exhibition La Fabrique du vivant, we talked about the living with living works by EcologicStudio (Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto), and with experts Marie-Sarah Adenis (designer and biologist), Frédérique Aït Touati (historian of science), Claire Brunet (philosopher), Emanuele Coccia (philosopher), Olivier Dauchot (physicist), Manuelle Freire (research development across Arts & Science), Emanuele Quinz (historian of art and design), and Patricia Ribault (historian and theorist of Gestaltung).
To renew the round table format (which is often only round by virtue of its name), to restore more lively forms of exchange than the usual conference procession of rehearsed speeches, hoping to spark radically multidisciplinary debates and grapple with the very objects of the discussion, we present a new format for public debate: Dissect. Critically referencing classic anatomy lessons – like that of Doctor Tulp, portrayed by Rembrandt in 1632 – Dissect is an updated theatre for the analysis and discussion of contemporary works of art and design in the very presence of the works. We ought to not be talking about things, but rather with them, combining words, gestures, and objects in a public dispositif specifically designed for such an interactive process.
Dissect, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, March 2019
Video – 6mn 33s – High band request
Images and editing: Corentin Laplanche-Tsutsui and Kiana Hubert-Low
The second presentation of Dissect took place at the Grand Palais (Paris) in the framework of Paris Photo 2019 with artworks of Meghann Riepenhoff, in the presence of the artist, with interventions by Emmanuel Alloa (philosopher), Federica Chiocchetti (writer and curator), Luce Lebart (photography historian and curator), Emanuele Quinz (art and design historian), Pascal Viel (chemist), Dork Zabunyan (art and film historian). Using the ancient technique of cyanotype, Meghann Riepenhoff questions the nature of our relationship to landscapes, time and impermanence, with experiments that intertwine chemistry and light.