Moires est un document de première main sur l’activité d’un artiste contemporain dont l’art consiste à prendre des clichés d’images de film dans les cinémathèques du monde entier. Certaines sont présentées ici pour leur valeur d’indication et nous invitent à les considérer aussi bien dans leur autonomie singulière que dans la relation plus ou moins oblique qu’elles instaurent avec le texte. Le voyeurisme du narrateur inscrit d’emblée le souvenir dans une mémoire fictive, cinématographique. Son regard glissant se plaît à brouiller les frontières, confondre les niveaux de perception, les points de vue, les temps, les identités. Résultat : journal intime et fiction, souvenirs et récit de voyages ; fragments, réflexions, notes, interviews, descriptions d’images se côtoient dans le livre d’Éric Rondepierre et tressent le fil d’une sorte de miroitement qui prend valeur de destin.
 
Ouvrage constitué de 22 chapitres de texte présentés en cahiers non reliés et 23 planches avec une image en couleur, imprimées en quadrichromie, qui viennent s’insérer dans les cahiers de textes. L’ensemble étant présenté dans une couverture enveloppante. Le texte est imprimé sur papier chiffon 120 g, les planches photographiques sur papier couché mat 250.
Released
15/04/1998
Collection
Hors Collection
Format
170 x 230
Portefolio sous emboîtage
23 planches photographiques couleur
144 pages
ISBN : 978-2-9106826-507
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Press review
– Born 1950 in Orléans.
– Graduate of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts de Paris, (drawing, printmaking).
– Doctorate in Aesthetics (Thesis on “Les yeux verts” by Marguerite Duras, Paris I University,).
– Aggregation in Visual Arts.
MA thesis on the theatre of S. I. Witkiewicz (Paris 1, 1976), and a DEA in comparative literature on “Written images” (Paris VII University, 1983). His multidisciplinary training and personal tastes have taken him in several directions. As a professional actor he has worked in France and Europe with directors such as Pierre Chabert, Le Théâtre d’En face and Bruno Meyssat, and with choreographers like Mathilde Monnier, Alain Rigout, Grands Magasins, Catherine Diverres and Bernardo Montet. His earlier artistic activities have included making short film, giving performances, and later, doing paintings (1985-90).

In the early 1990s Eric Rondepierre started exploring the blind spots of cinema. His intervention consisted in choosing frames (the images that are projected at a rate of 24 per second on the screen, and that are invisible in a normal screening) in accordance with clearly defined criteria, and then excerpting them and showing them as large-format photographic prints. This economy of the image, which is often defined as “conceptual,” brings into play several different registers (text, painting, cinema, photography) with a rigour that does not exclude strangeness or humour.

With exhibitions in France and abroad becoming increasingly frequent, he started writing fictions around his photographic texts.

In 1996 he was made an associate professor at Université de Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne).

Since 2002 his work has branched out. The artist has begun using his own images, recomposing them in combination with his texts or drawings, or with appropriated images from the cinema. His recent writings have also extended into other fields such as fiction and autobiography.