Sabine Blanchard is a French ‘polyartist’ of Flemish origin. From her various expatriations and her passion for ethnology, she shares an uninhibited eye for everyday objects, from which she draws her pictorial material. She believes that ‘ everything already exists, there's no need to create new forms’. She decided to reinterpret anonymous, modest industrial products graphically, in order to awaken their visual potential, over and above their already familiar functionality. Inspired by Architecture she studied at Saint Luc in Tournai, she uses screws, puzzles, brooms, hoops and kettledrums with extreme rigour. Each work is elaborated like the façade of a building, punctuated by solids and voids, exposed to the constant play of daylight. Her 3D compositions are elaborated, woven and sculpted until the balance is perfect. She has made this her philosophical quest.
With the exhibition Dé-Construction, it's the electric cable that is contorted with precision. Gentle formal allegories engage the viewer. From near and far, we wonder about the boundary between reality and illusion. Cast shadows are the order of the day. Colours intermingle, where other monochrome narratives honour the industrial material in its rawest expression. It's never a question of ‘recycling’, but of deliberately re-enchanting, in a world where consumerism overwhelms the eye and curbs the desire to settle down.
The artist proposes a pause on the image to celebrate the ‘simple beautiful’. In her personal and resolutely optimistic stroll, she offers a poetic timelessness to our so-called ‘everyday objects’...