Sculpcure is an installation made of rotting oranges, covered with insects and mould. As time passes, the oranges’ color darkens to brown and black, with spots of green and white. This is Blazy’s playful paean to decomposition, an ode to the transformative capabilities of matter, illustrated with na...
Sculpcure is an installation made of rotting oranges, covered with insects and mould. As time passes, the oranges’ color darkens to brown and black, with spots of green and white. This is Blazy’s playful paean to decomposition, an ode to the transformative capabilities of matter, illustrated with natural and artificial materials. Each of his works exists in its own temporal space, and the concepts of slow and random change are central to his artistic process.
Michel Blazy was born in Monaco in 1966. It was during his time studying at the Villa Arson in the 1980s that he first created a piece incorporating living elements, seeking to answer a burning question. The artist has since fashioned an artistic world of the absurd, the perishable, the living, and of transformations. He uses everyday materials and living, organic matter found in his kitchen or garden, giving life to a strange and moving art. His installations are a meeting of materials, an attempt to stretch out a moment in time by drawing on different survival strategies. Blazy’s work questions the nature/culture dichotomy that arose with the development of Humanism in the Renaissance. The artist has said: “My work is to do with the living, but not nature “. Blazy has developed an approach in which he enlists nature herself as a partner to create hybrids, works that occupy a reality quite different from that of inert matter, like the living. His creations reproduce and renew themselves, lasting through time. These objects are somehow chimeric, seeking to blur the lines that divide animal, vegetable, and mineral. They are much more about the process than the result. Each piece exists in its own time, ensuring that what each spectator sees is always unique.