Artwork
Artist

Idiom

Pierre Huyghe

2024
Real time voice generated by neural network, golden LED screen mask (plastic, copper, steel, nylon, aluminium, foam, PVC, rubber, metal)
31 x 19,5 x 19 cm
Winsing Arts Collection

Courtesy of the artist; Galerie Chantal Crousel. © PIerre Huyghe. © ANPIS FOTO

Idiom

Pierre Huyghe

2024
Real time voice generated by neural network, golden LED screen mask (plastic, copper, steel, nylon, aluminium, foam, PVC, rubber, metal)
31 x 19,5 x 19 cm
Winsing Arts Collection

Idiom is an unknown language that self-generates and emerges live. Specific features, some imperceptible by humans, are detected by sensors in the mask. The information is converted into particular phonemes and syntax then vocalized. The language appears as ineffable, from another reality, outside of us. The single Idiom consists of one mask displayed. It is conceptually treated as a kind of species that is separate from the humans. The mask observes phenomena in its environment. Over time, it develops a language of its own.

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Exhibition view at Winsing Art Place / Courtesy of the artist; Galerie Chantal Crousel. © PIerre Huyghe. © ANPIS FOTO
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Exhibition view at Winsing Art Place / Courtesy of the artist; Galerie Chantal Crousel. © PIerre Huyghe. © ANPIS FOTO
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Artist Biography
Pierre Huyghe
Born in 1962 in Paris, France, Pierre Huyghe creates art that spans diverse media, including film, site-specific works, sculpture, and situations. His works are conceived as speculative fiction and often present themselves as continuity between a wide range of intelligent forms, biological, technological, tangible inert matter that learn, modify and evolve. Huyghe has held solo exhibitions at major international art institutions, such as the Punta della Dogana in Venice, the Serpentine Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, and Tate Modern in London. He is the recipient of numerous awards and accolades, including the Hugo Boss Prize in 2002 and the Nasher Prize for sculptures in 2017.
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