17 July 2022 Performing, experimenting, emerging, revisiting, exploring and testifying; this is how the Rencontres d’Arles has categorised this year’s impressive curation of 40 exhibitions presenting 165 artists. Sprawled throughout the city’s charming streets (bar a few satellite shows), works are exhibited in unexpected contexts, from 12th-century chapels and cloisters to the floor above a Monoprix supermarket. Just like the heat of summer in the south of France, photography has woven its way into the life of the city, from 4 July – 25 September. Also not to be missed in the city is Arthur Jafa’s powerful exhibition ‘Live Evil’ on show at Luma Arles.
Noémie Goudal. Phoenix VI, 2021. Courtesy of Les Filles du Calvaire gallery and the artist.
Katrien De Blauwer: ‘The Pictures She Doesn’t Show to Anyone’
Katrien de Blauwer, Beginning (62), 2020. Courtesy of Les filles du calvaire gallery and Fifty One gallery
Lukas Hoffmann: ‘Evergreen’
Sam Contis: ‘Transit’
With Sam Contis’ expressive documentation, Rencontres d’Arles viewers are brought into her protagonist’s worlds; a powerful effect when we consider photography’s complex role in the construction of place and self. In ‘Transit’, intimately scaled gelatin prints combine with large-scale colour photographs across the three series on show at Carré d’Art. In one, historically referenced images of a high school girls’ cross-country team nod to the passage of time, while political and personal tensions lurk in the background. The next gallery travels to the English countryside, recording stiles within the context of boundaries and freedom. Deep Springs is where the show completes, as Contis explores Midwestern and masculine mythologies through enigmatic images of one of the last all-male colleges in the United States.Mary McCartney: ‘Moment of Affection’
Love, desire and grief come together in a heartfelt collection of visual memories in Mary McCartney’s ‘Moment of Affection’ at Rencontres d’Arles. She describes how the exhibition began to take form during the pause of the pandemic: ‘I have taken my time, looking through every contact sheet and photograph in my archive… Finding simple moments, rich in feelings. And here they are.’ Situated within the impressive ‘bastide’ of Château La Coste, moving through the gallery is an intimate reflection on the full spectrum of affection, throughout both McCartney’s and our own lives as viewers.