Since 1980, Michel
François has
developed a hybrid and fluid oeuvre, escaping any categorisation of style and
genre. While he claims to be a sculptor, he built his work on all scales and
using all media including photography, video and installations. On an artistic
level, he was mostly trained by his father, a painter, and his mother, a dancer
and sculptor; which can explain his praxis, always halfway between three and
two dimensionality, between image and sculpture.
After studying theatre at the
National Institute of Performing Arts (INSAS), he obtained a diploma at the
Graphic Research School (ERG) in Brussels where he later held the position of
head of the sculpture workshop. He also collaborated with choreographers and
directed the scenography of Mountain
Fountain by
Pierre Droulers (1995), and The Song (2009 - with Ann Veronica Janssens) and
Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker's En attendant (2012). Alongside numerous exhibitions
abroad, he participated in Documenta IX in Kassel in 1992 and represented
Belgium at the Venice Biennale, with Ann Veronica Janssens in 1999. Since 2009,
he has been teaching at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts of Paris.
Michel François’s oeuvre is intimately linked to the living, in all its
forms (the human, the vegetal, the mineral, the organic). Like an
anthropologist, he collects objects (bottles, strings, pieces of plates,
pearls, cans, etc.), materials (ink, clay, water, tissues, pollens, etc.),
gestures, attitudes and basic acts (breathing, crushing, shouting, walking,
bending, shaping, etc.) in their most ordinary and insignificant aspects, to
unleash their strength, emotion and poetry. Despite the extreme diversity of
objects, sometimes collected, sometimes manufactured, derived from his daily
life or collected during his travels and meetings, it however constitutes a
coherent system. Defined as the ‘Bazaar of Existentiality’ by Paul Ardenne[1], the work of Michel François tackles a way
of capturing life in its critical and delicate moments. From the real, it
takes, moves, confronts, zooms and freezes moments and situations in order to
create a sensitive and less dull experience of everyday life.
Designed according to the concept of permanent recycling,
reconfiguration and (re) assembly, the works of Michel François are always
linked to each other. His exhibitions, photographs, videos, sculptures and
installations are always juxtaposed in a different way in order to be more
precise about his approach and to go against a fixed concept of art. A material
is transformed into a sculpture, which is then taken up in various
installations, which become the subject of a video, from which the artist
extracts a photograph, which in turn is recovered in another installation and
so on. This process is also found in the forms: holes at the elbows of a
sweater become eyes, a rectangular opening in an architecture becomes a
painting on the wall; an ink-secreting octopus, a Rorschach test; the entrance
to a cave, a vagina, etc.
This work in progress, constantly being remodelled, should not be
limited to the pleasures of shapes and illusionistic representational games.
Michel François’s works show conceptual demand and formal seduction, the
radicalism of the gesture and the intelligence of the image, which make his
signature recognisable among all. Similarly, the subjects dealt with in his
work, if they seem disparate, subtly play with antagonisms and reconcile fields
that are often distant and contradictory in the world of art: emptiness and
fullness, interior and exterior, consumption and destruction, unity and
disorder, action and languor, memory and oblivion, the natural and the
artificial, the intimate and the universal, and so on.
Inspired
by the teachings of Fluxus, affirming the necessity of a rapprochement between
art and life, the art of Michel François is also questioning the value and the
permanence of the work of art, somewhat taking a stand against the artistic
system. For example, the Bureau
augmenté (1998)
is a vast installation where everything is connected to everything (press
clippings, previous works, rest of small works, etc.); La Sieste, la Réserve, le Monde et les Bras (1991) is a shelf on which various
objects are placed (traces of bodies molded in plaster, belt, balls of earth
assembled into a rosary, balls of string, which may be left as such, arranged
or extracted in the exhibition space according to the choice of the organiser;
his photographs converted into a poster, without comment or signature, are
regularly distributed to those who wish to take them home).
[1] Ardenne Paul,
« Michel François. Le Bazar de l’existentialité », in : artpress, n°245, Paris, April 1999, pp. 34-36.