Exhibition from July 6 to September 21 2024
The Arts of Australia Gallery •Stéphane Jacob invites the Oia Gallery , for a two-part conversation at 13 rue Chapon 75003 Paris. It is the encounter between Aboriginal art and Southeast Asian art, two cultures that put their narrative energy at the service of a poetic work of memory.
Further, higher, stronger, together!
From their inception in ancient Greece to their modern incarnation, the Olympics celebrate physical power, mental resilience, courage and determination.
The Olympic Games bring people together, exalt athletes and praise their achievements, glorifying the strength, surpassing oneself and endurance of women and men.
With Racines, the Galerie Arts d’Australie• Stéphane Jacob and the Galerie Oia had initiated a conversation by questioning the links that unite the present to the past and invoke heritage and mythologies.
During the summer and Olympic season, the two galleries will deepen their exchanges, presenting with the STRONG exhibition a new selection of works from both galleries.
By putting into perspective the different nuances of force – vital, physical, mental force – the works celebrate, through a range of techniques, the vitality of the territory and the need for artistic commitment.
The exhibition highlights profiles that are part of the perpetuation of rites, that question their relationships to territory and time, that affirm their identity, whether singular or common.
Artworks from Arts d’Australie’s Gallery
Aileen Adamson, Barney Campbell Tjakamarra, Collectif Erub Arts, Debby Brown Napaljarri, Konstantina, Kunmanara Sammy Lyons, Elizabeth Marks Nakamarra, Geraldine Granites Napangardi, Gloria Tamerre Petyarre, Leston Spencer Japaljarri, Lofty Bardayal Nadjamerrek, Nathania Granites Nangala, Reva Dickson Nungarrayi, Ronnie Tjampitjimpa, Sabrina Robertson Nangala, Samantha Wilson Napurrurla, Tim Payungka Tjapangardi, Valerie Marshall Napanangka
Artworks from the OIA Gallery
Channy Chhoeun (Cambodia), Dibsanist (Thailand), Dina Thun (Cambodia) Emmanuelle Nhean (Cambodia), Faizal Yunus (Malaysia), Sary Nou (Cambodia), Kosal Long, Heng Ravuth, Ponleu, Ramya Chuon (Cambodia)