large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon

INSIDE the 17th edition of the Biennale de lyon

 

The 17th Biennale de Lyon opens under the theme of Les voix des fleuves – Crossing the water, exploring the fluidity of human relationships and our connection to the environment. With artistic direction by Isabelle Bertolotti and guest curated by Alexia Fabre, director of the Beaux-Arts de Paris, the biennale brings together a selection of artists, including Jeremy Deller, Oliver Beer, Nathan Coley, Mona Cara, and many more, whose works resonate with the region’s places, stories, and people.

 

In a bold reimagining of France’s premier contemporary art event, this edition introduces two new venues: Les Grandes Locos, a former industrial building complex used as a SNCF train maintenance center in the 20th century; and the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie at the heritage site of the Grand Hôtel-Dieu, a former hospital from the 12th century. ‘The Grandes Locos illustrates the theme of the 17th edition of the Biennale, devoted to human relationships,’ Fabre shares.‘The Grandes Locos is, in fact, a place, a specific site, even a landscape where nature has taken over and which is steeped in human history—a history of labor and industry. We are, after all, in the factories where trains were manufactured and repaired for many years. This history is still present. It can be seen on the floors and walls of this modern cathedral.’

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Les Grandes Locos © Métropole de Lyon, photo by Jérémy Cuenin

 

 

LES Grandes Locos — a symbol of strength, repair, and protest

 

Situated along the Rhône River, just downstream from its junction with the Saône, Les Grandes Locos is a complex of industrial buildings spanning several dozen hectares. Originally inaugurated in 1846 by the Compagnie des Hauts Fourneaux, Forges et Ateliers d’Oullins, the site later became an SNCF train maintenance center in the 20th century. This factory complex, which bears witness to French railway history, was operational until 2019 for the maintenance of electric locomotives and spare parts. Now transformed into a cultural venue, it hosts the 17th Biennale de Lyon (find more here), with the site’s history echoed through the artists’ works, exploring themes of travel and movement, repair and care, collective strength, and protest.

 

‘The artists have created artworks and worlds that interact with the architecture and spirit of the place,’ guest curator Alexia Fabre notes. ‘These artworks reveal traces of labor, evidence of repair work, but also its political history, as the vast premises were also a site of resistance during the Second World War and have always been a place of activity. It’s a place that reminds us of the sheer power of coming together, and through the artworks created by the artists, it shows us how much stronger we become when we work together—much like the Seine and Rhône rivers that merge around the corner at the confluence.’

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
inside the 17th Biennale d’ art contemporain de Lyon, Les Grande Locos © ADAGP, Paris, 2024, photo by Jair Lanes

 

 

DESIGNBOOM HIGHLIGHTS: Oliver Beer explores acoustic resonance

 

Inside the industrial structures of Les Grandes Locos, large-scale installations by several artists from across the globe unfold. Among them, visitors can find an expansive installation by British cross-disciplinary artist Oliver Beer, known for creating sculptures, installations, videos, and immersive live performances that reveal the hidden properties and musicality of objects and spaces.

 

This year at the Biennale de Lyon, Beer presents The Resonance Project – The Cave, an exploration of the acoustic phenomenon of resonance, where sound waves created by material or bodily vibrations lead to oscillations. The project has adapted to diverse locations, ranging from the sewers of London to the escalator shafts of the Centre Pompidou. However, it consistently incorporates the voice, the body, the surrounding architecture, and a specially composed score to highlight the site’s natural frequency. ‘It’s part of a series I’ve been working on for many years, where I go into an architectural space and find the note that will make it sing to you,’ the artist explains. ‘By that, I mean you can sing one particular note in a room, and if that note resonates perfectly with the space, it will reinforce itself and sing back to you exponentially louder than you are singing (…) It’s a surreal experience to hear your voice coming from the walls around you, rather than from your own body.’

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
The Resonance Project – The Cave by Oliver Beer | image by Jair Lanes

 

 

Banners of Protest: Jeremy Deller’s Fusion of Art and Activism

 

In another room of the industrial complex, visitors are encountered with a series of works by British artist Jeremy Deller, known for his interest in social history, politics, and music. Favoring collaboration over working with objects, Deller brings together people from diverse backgrounds to create encounters, objects, and events, ranging from local festivals to documentary archives and political banners.

 

Since 2000, Deller has collaborated with Ed Hall, a maker of trade union banners, to produce a series of contemporary visual expressions that challenge the formation of identities—whether individual, collective, national, or marginal. On view at the Biennale, these banners were originally created for public spaces and feature messages that resonate with a broad audience. The vibrant signs carry slogans like More Poetry is Needed, We miss the World of Twist, and Every Age Has Its Own Fascism. Through their use of varied colors and heights, the banners evoke the energy of street processions and festival parades. ‘I love processions,’ Deller says. ‘As humans, it’s in our DNA to be instinctively drawn to large public events that bring us together.’ Accompanying the banners are videos that document artistic workshops and political gatherings, further enhancing the installation.

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Jeremy Deller, banners made by Ed Hall | photo by Jair Lanes (also header image)

 

 

Hans Schabus’s Monument for People on the Move

 

Hans Schabus’s sculptural and architectural installations arise from a deeply personal engagement with exhibition spaces and their contexts. The Austrian visual artist investigates the interplay between his artworks and their environments by employing unexpected materials and making the most of unconventional circumstances. Through radical techniques such as hollowing out, filling in, banding, and cutting, Schabus deconstructs and reconstructs spaces, prompting visitors to reassess their bearings and movement, thus gaining a new perspective on the exhibition site.

 

At the Biennale de Lyon, Schabus presents a 45-meter-long wooden tunnel titled Monument for People on the Move. ‘My work is about the principle of moving and staying, being in one place and moving from place to place, or moving without having a destination,’ the artist says. ‘It follows the scale of an Airbus A321 (…) It’s actually a huge cylinder or tube, and I thought this would be a good element for this large space. I would say it’s a work about movement and counter-movement, of being inside or outside. It’s a work that, in some way, questions identity and the relationships between identities. Who am I, and who are we? How are we connected?’ The two elements of Schabus’s project—the airplane and the turtles—interact harmoniously, with the turtles providing stability to the entire structure. The reptile sculptures symbolize slow, natural movement, contrasting sharply with the rapid motion of the airplane.

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Monument for People on the Move (2024) by Hans Schabus | image © designboom

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Hans Schabus, Monument for People on the Move © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 , photo by Jair Lanes

Mona Cara’s Cactus is A Playful Tapestry of Symbols and Stories

 

French artist Mona Cara works at the crossroads of tapestry and comic strips, creating hybrid textile pieces that transform the chaos of the world into a joyful apocalypse. In her exploration of the pictorial and sculptural possibilities of warp and weft, she blends traditional, manual craftsmanship with industrial techniques like jacquard weaving, which allows her to program intricate patterns and varied textures into her pieces. Drawing on a range of children’s imagery, Cara takes a playful, roundabout approach in her tragi-comic works that probe the dysfunctions of contemporary society.

 

For the Biennale, Mona Cara has crated a vibrant woven cactus blending a variety of playful symbols and references.

‘My work is always about telling a story. For the Lyon Biennale, that story is a collective one that takes place in a cactus town. Here, I wanted to create an interaction between lots of characters, inspired by real people who all go to a café, Café Vola, which actually exists,’ Cara notes. ‘This piece was produced through an enormous joint effort, involving drawing, weaving, lace, and stitching. There was a lot of discussion, and many people contributed to creating the cactus. I’d even say hundreds of people. All sorts of visual references, all sorts of iconography can be found in my work. You’ll find images from classical paintings, as well as toys, symbols, and much more. There is always an opportunity to create a story from these different ideas, which are often rooted in popular culture.’

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Mona Cara, Le Cactus, 2024 | image © designboom

 

 

MORE VENUES OF ThE 17TH Biennale de Lyon

 

Alongside Les Grandes Locos, The 17th Biennale de Lyon also retains its historic site, the Musée d’art contemporain (macLYON), as well as a series of other venues in Lyon’s metropolitan area and the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, such as the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon – Grand Hôtel-Dieu, the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon, the Fondation Bullukian, and the Institut d’art contemporain de Villeurbanne. The event also takes place in two unusual public spaces, the Lyon car parking site LPA Saint Antoine and the Lyon Metro Station. Artistic director Isabelle Bertolotti explains that the use of these two unexpected venues is ‘an opportunity to display the artwork in other contexts and above all, free of charge to a very wide audience’. This year, the event is also being held at Musée gallo-romain Saint-Romain-en-Gal, where contemporary pieces are displayed within the permanent exhibition. 

The 17th Biennale de Lyon is on view from September 21st, 2024, to February 5th, 2025 – more information on this year’s program and venues can be found here.

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
overview of Les Grande Locos, Hall 1 © ADAGP, Paris, 2024, photo by Jair Lanes

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Idiopolis (| – X), (2024) by Nefeli Papadimouli | image © designboom

 

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
text-based light sculpture Palace (2015) by Nathan Coley | image © designboom

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Sensitive (2024) by Bastien David |photo by Jair Lanes, courtesy of the artist

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Jeremy Deller | image © designboom

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Jeremy Deller | image © designboom

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Murdesmots (2024) by Bocar Niang | image © designboom

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
la chariotte des malins (2024) by Clément Courgeon © ADAGP, Paris, 2024, Photo by Jair Lanes

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Au-delà de la mer, une rivière / Beyond the sea, a stream (2024) by Olivia Funes Lastra | image © designboom

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Un Chemin Commun (A Common Path) (2024) by Iván Argote on the ground, courtesy of the artist, and Les paysages défilent (2024) by Chourouk Hriech, Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Anne-Sarah Bénichou | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024, photo by Jair Lanes

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
light sculpture by Nathan Colley, outside of Les Grandes Locos | image © designboom

large-scale artworks by jeremy deller, oliver beer & more unfold at the 17th biennale de lyon
Alexia Fabre and Isabelle Bertolotti | image © Blandine Soulage

 

 

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Anaïs-Tohé Commaret, because of (U) (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Anaïs-Tohé Commaret, because of (U) (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Robert Gabris, Asylum – A Poem of Unrest (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Robert Gabris, Asylum – A Poem of Unrest (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Taysir Batniji, Al-Anqâa (Le Phénix) (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Taysir Batniji, Al-Anqâa (Le Phénix) (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Lorraine de Sagazan and Anouk Maugein, Monte di Pietà (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon  | photo by Jair Lanes
Lorraine de Sagazan and Anouk Maugein, Monte di Pietà (2024) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Christian Boltanski and Annettele Messager, Voyage De Noces (1975) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Christian Boltanski and Annettele Messager, Voyage De Noces (1975) at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Hilary Galbreaith, Be Our Guest (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Hilary Galbreaith, Be Our Guest (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Nadežda Kirnćanski, nista spec 1.0 / nothing special 1.0 (2018-2024)  at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | photo by Jair Lanes
Nadežda Kirnćanski, nista spec 1.0 / nothing special 1.0 (2018-2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | photo by Jair Lanes
Vir Andres Hera, Amoxtli (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne |  image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Vir Andres Hera, Amoxtli (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Vir Andres Hera, Amoxtli (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Vir Andres Hera, Amoxtli (2024) at the Institut d'art contemporain de Villeurbanne | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo Jair Lane
Hajar SATARI, L'oreiller (2023) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Hajar SATARI, L'oreiller (2023) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Florian Mermin, Violette Cristal (2024) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo by Jair Lanes
Florian Mermin, Violette Cristal (2024) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | image © ADAGP, Paris, 2024 photo by Jair Lanes
Guadalupe Maravilla, Disease Thrower – Purring Monster With A Mirror On Its Back at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Guadalupe Maravilla, Disease Thrower – Purring Monster With A Mirror On Its Back at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Guadalupe Maravilla, El Boquerón Retablo (2023) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes
Guadalupe Maravilla, El Boquerón Retablo (2023) at the Cité Internationale de la Gastronomie de Lyon | photo by Jair Lanes

project info: 

 

event: Lyon Contemporary Art Biennale | @biennaledelyon

theme: Les voix des fleuves – Crossing the water

artistic director: Isabelle Bertolotti
guest curator: Alexia Fabre
locations: Les Grandes Locos, Grand Hôtel-Dieu, Musée d’Art Contemporain de Lyon, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon, the Fondation Bullukian, Institut d’art contemporain de Villeurbanne, LPA Saint Antoine, Lyon Metro Station, Musée gallo-Romain Saint-Romain-en-Gal in Lyon, France

dates: September 21st, 2024 – January 5th, 2025

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