Cathy de Monchaux’s artistic language has always been rife with paradox. Immediate, distinctive and utterly particular to her; it is both sharply-focused and wide-reaching, extending way beyond issues of style to permeate all manner of media from photographed landscape to recorded sound as well as the intricately-wrought floor and wall pieces for which she is best known. A peculiar parallel universe is conjured up, redolent with mystery and yet instantly communicable, where forms, images and objects are both disquietingly familiar as well as being impossible to identify. Wrong-footing is rife: what appears to be one thing mutates into something altogether different, and just when you think you’ve got a handle on that, it becomes something else yet again.
The most recent work is especially elusive. Drawings, sculpture, photographs and found objects combine, coalesce and assume new lives of their own. Free from category or definition, these complex hybrids hang or prop themselves against walls or in corners, uniting to create an environment in which culture and nature go into mutual melt down. Yet, amidst all this fluidity and metamorphing, there has also been a definite shift in mood. A fragile calm has descended. The atmosphere remains uneasy but held in check. De Monchaux’s modus operandi continues to be meticulous and intricate but it is now less frenetic: ornament has been reined-in; dusty white and cool verdigris combine to chill out the more livid flesh tones and boundaries are blurred out by frizzy whorls of wire. Although sexual imagery still seethes and simmers beneath the surface, it is not so outrageously, viscerally genital, no longer so eager to bare all.
Which is not to say that the intensity has abated, more that the focus has changed. It is almost as if, by honing her vocabulary, De Monchaux is allowing some air into her psychodramas. Her new series, collectively titled "Mise en Scene" houses disparate objects in such a way that the focus is on the site of the drama and not, as in the past, the containers themselves. These odd pieces of found and fabricated flotsam may not be as elaborately-wrought as previous votive pieces, but they are just as obsessively-orchestrated. Trapped behind glass they function as propositions, snatches of poetry or music – immortalizing and monumentalizing the insignificant and opening it up to all of us. |