IBASHO presents the work of Guillaume Simoneau
IBASHO exhibits the work of Canadian photographer Guillaume Simoneau (°1978).
When he was a child, Guillaume Simoneau’s family adopted a nest of baby crows orphaned from a fallen tree. Photographs from this time, taken by Simoneau’s mother, a poet and painter, are set in dialogue with Simoneau’s works, produced in the Spring of 2016 and 2017 in Japan.
Evoking the post-war masterpiece ‘Karasu’ [Ravens] by the Japanese photographer Masahisa Fukase, Simoneau’s series ‘Murder’ explores the ambivalent and shifting figure of the crow; at once a symbol of intimacy and an omen of turbulent times. ‘A murder of crows’ is also the collective noun for a group of crows.
In ‘Murder’ Simoneau takes tropes of life and death and interweaves them, creating space for alternative stories. ‘Murder’ does not express existentialist anxiety, contrary to Fukase’s ‘Ravens’. Instead, it displays a fascination for situations in which vulnerability and power are found together.
On his travels through Japan, Simoneau consciously retraced the steps of Fukase, who journeyed to these same places. The shots of his travels in Japan also feature people, landscapes and views. At first sight a diversion, these images lend the whole series a layeredness and a depth. What Simoneau presents to us is a vivid place where light and dark exist together in a tight embrace.
Montreal based Guillaume Simoneau (1978) began his independent studies in photography after completing a diploma in applied science. Today his practice is split between personal projects and editorial & commercial assignments.
His Murder series premiered this year at the Rencontres d'Arles international photography festival and was published by MACK London.
Guillaume Simoneau: Murder
IBASHO
2 November – 1 December 2019
Opening: Saturday 2 November from 14:00 till 18:00
Tolstraat 67
2000 Antwerp
www.ibashogallery.com