Les Herbes Folles du Vieux Logis
Joël Andrianomearisoa Malagasy
Not on view
Inspired by Malagasy poet Maurice Ramarozaka, this homage to "Les Herbes Folles du Vieux Logis" is a nostalgic tribute to Madagascar's natural beauty. The fluid lines evoke long grasses that grow freely across the center of the island's verdant landscape. The rich, natural tones derive from the colors of the stones, earth, and sky. This example is one of a series of roughly twenty pastel drawings and thirty textile paintings. The developmental process for these creations unfolded over eight months of collecting various fibers and textiles, experimenting with words, creating preparatory drawings, and finally arranging and layering different cut fabrics. The finished canvases carefully manipulate texture and color to produce a flowing surface that ripples and shifts like grasses in the wind.
Raised in Antananarivo, Joël Andrianomearisoa is among the leading contemporary African artists and the most important figure on the contemporary Malagasy arts scene. He began engaging in diverse artistic circles in the early 1990s, drawing inspiration from musicians, fashion designers, and textile artists. He later moved to Paris, where he graduated from the École spéciale d’architecture in 2003. Beginning with fragile paper creations, his practice has embraced a mixed-media approach ranging from sculpture and installation to craft and textiles. He has exhibited his works at leading global institutions, including the Studio Museum in Harlem and the Centre Pompidou, and in 2019 he became the first artist to represent Madagascar at the Venice Biennale. Consciously global in his approach, Andrianomearisoa moves between Paris and Antananarivo, where he co-founded Hakanto Contemporary, an independent, non-profit space for artists, with Hasnaine Yavarhoussen.
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