Luciole Press Contributor Janie interviews French artist Vincent Cherib about his photographic exhibition "Disaster Recovery"

Janie is a part-time reporter and has been a freelance writer and editor since the early 1980s. Her business profiles and feature stories have appeared in local and regional publications including SPOTLIGHT, BSCENE and Inside Press. Contact her via www.myspace.com/wordist.
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--FRENCH ARTIST VINCENT CHERIB--
Observe a broken sidewalk, a warn carpet on which children once played, a discarded keyboard, a surgical scar.
All carry tales they might never tell.
French artist Vincent Cherib captured the stories of abandoned warehouses and shutdown factories—among other locations—and immortalizes them with color in his photographic exhibition Disaster Recovery.
The heart of the project is hope.
I liked the idea of captivating a moment, of keeping a souvenir,” he says. While he didn’t intend to become an artist, he admits, “It’s a passion, almost vital for me, as much as music.”
Cherib photographed abandoned and soon-to-be-demolished factories and warehouses to capture their former usefulness and their imminent demise.
“I sometimes rework my photos and transform them to get different perspectives,” Cherib says.
Cherib plays with colors to create an abstract image from a picture or forms color intensity and variety into a silkscreen effect.
DISASTER RECOVERY #18 is a striking contrast of red/orange and turquoise that render a woman’s face inanimate. Has she recovered from an experience or is she heading towards one? Her pain, longing and relief are both intensified and nullified by unnatural hue.
Precisely what Cherib wanted to convey.
He notes the woman’s face and expression and contrasts the figurative aspect and the abstract—graffiti under her eye could be a tear or an eyelash.
“My photos are very much linked to my emotion of the moment, to the way I feel at a given time,” Cherib says. “I feel alive when I shoot (a picture), like I’m living fully in the real present, which gives me the opportunity to consider the future serenely.”
Cherib, a native of
I was referred to www.wikipedia.org when Cherib mentioned Banksy, a renowned 30-something street graffiti artist who stencils and paints. See I told you I know little about art and got some education while writing this article. Wikipedia calls his work “often-satirical pieces of art on topics such as politics, culture, and ethics.”
“On the walls are often messages with many meanings,” Cherib says. “I love his perceptivity, his intelligence.”
Andy Warhol was friend and mentor to
I admit I researched his site more than I did others and agree with Cherib that he can be scary however I’m also touched by his drawings. They’re simple and yet pained.
A recurring theme is no man’s land to keep a living trace—and express the soul—of a dying or lifeless place.
“I'm quite curious,” Cherib admits. “I like to look around me when I walk along the streets or elsewhere . . . to spot interesting sites to photograph this way.”
One of my favorites in the collection is DISASTER RECOVERY #3.
Through a jagged-edged window embedded in a wall alive with colorful graffiti one sees sun-splattered greenery. Interestingly the angle of the sun against the wall’s inner corner detaches it from—and joins it with—nature outside.
“Taking pictures is often a way to meditate,” Cherib says. “I need to be alone in these empty sites to be able to focus my attention. Silence is essential.”
He recalls a time he was accompanied by someone on a photo shoot.
“My inspiration was almost absent,” he says. “Dogs barking in the distance even troubled me once."
READ the rest of the interview and see more photos at LUCIOLE PRESS : Janie's page
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