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Alexandre Bavard at Tick Tack

Artists: Alexandre Bavard

Exhibition title: BRAV

Venue: Tick Tack, Antwerp, Belgium

Date: January 27 – March 24, 2023

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and Tick Tack, Antwerp

TICK TACK is excited to host its first show of 2023 and presents the emerging Paris based artist – Alexandre Bavard. In 2019, Bavard had a solo presentation on CINEMA TICK TACK. BRAV marks the artist’s full-on solo presentation in Belgium.

The title of the exhibition BRAV is a reference to the bravery that was key during medieval fighting tournaments. Furthermore it refers to BRAV-M, a special police brigade on motorcycles in Paris, especially created to operate during violent demonstrations in early 2019 during the Yellow Jackets protests.

As a starting point for the show, Bavard used media footage from the recent protests in France where a random guy dressed as a medieval knight was kicking a riot cop with his armour and sword. For Bavard, this felt as an aesthetically very powerful reflection of a moment in history. He started to explore the character of the knight, fulfilling his relentless need to speak about the relationship between citizens and state.

BRAV features a new series of paintings, sculptures, in-situ installations and a performance inspired by the artist’s unique understanding of the common aesthetics that medieval warriors and modern “knights” bring through the ages. Linked together, the parts of the exhibition form a truly theatrical experience for the audience, offering a journey from the past to the future with the exhibition right in the center of storytelling.

For the paintings Bavard uses his own archive of photos taken during the street protests: reworked graffiti and tags show the seemingly ephemeral practice, revealing an infinite dialogue between artists writing over each other’s works. This background gives us a deeper understanding not only of the work and its urban inspirations, but also of the artist. Graffiti and tags, as an act of vandalism, were always present in Bavard’s artistic DNA: a constant play with the city, the architecture and the streets – closely linked to adventure, risk, adrenaline and of course, as a consequence – police and justice.

Bavard’s sculptures feel like present day artifacts of heroic fantasy – a vibrant clash between the medieval mythology of King Arthur’s knights and a very punk and trashy aesthetic of old classic sci-fi movies such as Robocop and Terminator that formed the core inspiration for the show.

Additionally, during the opening night the performance An Eye for an Eye will take place. In the form of a theatrical play, the performance puts together all chapters of the exhibition and narrates a story about protestors as present-day knights. Authentic medieval chants will allow for a feminine energy to counterbalance the intense clash between two knights, past and present.

***

BRAV by Alexandre Bavard

In November 2018, the first demonstrations of the “gilets-jaunes” took place. Initially, this protest movement focused on the rising price of gas, before spreading to numerous topics questioning French society such as buying power, citizen representation or police abuse. This dynamic of struggle has surprisingly unprecedented characteristics. The “gilets-jaunes” had no leader, yet for two years they met every Saturday in multiple cities to demonstrate, while they suffered significant repression from the police force. In Paris, the artist Alexandre Bavard took part in the first series of these protests, and thus began a vast iconographic research on uprisings. In one of the photographs collected, a mobster is entirely adorned in a knight’s armour. Lost in a contemporary crowd, this anachronistic character became the starting point for this exhibition.

The title of the exhibition plays with the sound of “brave”, a supposedly chivalrous value, and “BRAV”, the acronym of a particularly brutal motorized police squadron that was resurrected on the occasion of the “gilets- jaunes”. The exhibition is therefore an invitation to question the relevance of the use of state violence in our democracies. Which individuals are the most dangerous? Is it a group of citizens aspiring to have a better life while using violence to make themselves heard? Or is it an armed group acting under the orders of political power to protect capitalist institutions? Rather than formulating an answer that would necessarily be manichean, the artist stages the phantasmal figure of the knight and the erroneous figure of the policeman, in order to better question their position and role in their respective societies.

The climax of this reflection can be felt in the exhibition’s opening performance. “An Eye For An Eye” is a duel between a knight in armour and a policeman in protective gear, both trying to tear out their opponent’s eye. A choreographed tournament that is not only a metaphorical revenge for those many protesters whose eyes have been gouged out by police flashbulbs. It is above all about winning the heart of a lady, a singer from another time, an allegory of freedom and forgotten values. “An Eye For An Eye” is a reference to the law of retaliation, a law whose use is generally considered a marker of an archaic society. This reference resonates curiously with the police violence suffered by the “gilets-jaunes”: is losing one’s eye or one’s hand when expressing disagreement a sign that a society is advanced?

The answer to this question may be found somewhere in the exhibition, amidst this explosion of attributes, signs and symbols. Tonfas and handcuffs evoke the world of the police, while articulated gauntlets or an excalibur stuck in a scooter remind us of the medieval period. Alexandre Bavard’s research is rooted in a practice of gleaning, retrieving and pilfering bits of the urban environment, and fragments of historical artefacts, in a constellation of ambiguities and tensions. We thus find prints of Burgundian recumbents imploring salvation for the hands lost by the demonstrators. Carpets, distinctive features of the artist’s Georgian background, are regularly used in his performances to mark an intimate space. From this temporal shock, from these collisions of values, there is an erasure of all opposition between high and low culture and a cathartic desire to sublimate social tensions.

By sacralising the anonymous figure of the rioter freeing himself from his chains, Alexandre Bavard produces a monument to the honour of all those citizens who have paid with their lives for our social rights. He reminds us that the pandemic, not police actions, succeeded in canalizing the “gilets-jaunes” movement. The flame of revolt may have been extinguished, but the embers of discontent are still burning. There is strong evidence that the pension reform or the galloping inflation are the breaths that can rekindle the revolutionary spark. Perhaps this is an opportunity to remember that the difference between a revolt and a revolution is not just a few letters. For a revolt to become a revolution, the rioters must be able to overpower the armed forces. Those few letters are the first of a new chapter, written by the protesters. It is now up to us to write History!

-Andy Rankin

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, GRENAD, 2023, Resin, Cotton, Spraypaint, chain, 150 x 150 x 70 cm

Alexandre Bavard, GRENAD, 2023, Resin, Cotton, Spraypaint, chain, 150 x 150 x 70 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, 1981, 2023, Scooter, Sword, 174 x 92 x 47 cm

Alexandre Bavard, 1981, 2023, Scooter, Sword, 174 x 92 x 47 cm

Alexandre Bavard, 1981, 2023, Scooter, Sword, 174 x 92 x 47 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV Installation, 2023, Carpet, plaster sculptures, 240 x 160 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, SAEYO, 2023, Carpet, Frame, 420 x 210 cm

Alexandre Bavard, MOSA, 2023, Carpet, Frame, 240 x 330 cm

Alexandre Bavard, Euro Flashball, 2023, Spray-paint on Cotton, 196 x 131 cm

Alexandre Bavard, Flash, 2023, Spray-paint on Cotton, 117 x 44 cm

Alexandre Bavard, Fuck the Police, 2023, Spray-paint on Cotton, 147 x 114,5 cm

Alexandre Bavard, BRAV, 2023, exhibition view, Tick Tack, Antwerp

Alexandre Bavard, KINO MOMO, In-situ basement video installation, Robocop (1987, Paul Verhoeven), Excalibur (1981, John Boorman), The Monopoly of Violence (2020, Dave Dufrensne), Variable Dimensions

Alexandre Bavard, KINO MOMO, In-situ basement video installation, Robocop (1987, Paul Verhoeven), Excalibur (1981, John Boorman), The Monopoly of Violence (2020, Dave Dufrensne), Variable Dimensions

Alexandre Bavard, KINO MOMO, In-situ basement video installation, Robocop (1987, Paul Verhoeven), Excalibur (1981, John Boorman), The Monopoly of Violence (2020, Dave Dufrensne), Variable Dimensions

Alexandre Bavard, KINO MOMO, In-situ basement video installation, Robocop (1987, Paul Verhoeven), Excalibur (1981, John Boorman), The Monopoly of Violence (2020, Dave Dufrensne), Variable Dimensions

Alexandre Bavard, KINO MOMO, In-situ basement video installation, Robocop (1987, Paul Verhoeven), Excalibur (1981, John Boorman), The Monopoly of Violence (2020, Dave Dufrensne), Variable Dimensions

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