sans titre, Paris x Union Pacific, London

Caroline Mesquita, Wei Libo

I Dreamt I Dwelt in Marble Halls

 

A strange dream led me here. 

 

Once, I entered an unknown house that seemed quite ordinary. I found myself alone among someone else’s belongings and I started to explore. “Is anyone there?” I called, welcomed only by a hollow silence. I wandered through different rooms, coming back through a hallway that led to the living room. There, a handsome cream sofa faced me. Sitting down, I realized it wasn’t real; its lustrous leather texture was a complete illusion. I plucked a peach from a basket beside me; it was too light to be real. I stood up brusquely and I examined each object in the room. Everything was fake. 

 

At Art-o-rama 2024 in Marseille, the works of Caroline Mesquita (b. 1989, France), presented by Union Pacific, and those of Libo Wei (b. 1994, China) presented by Sans Titre, reminded me of this moment. While my body moved through difference spaces, my fingers slipped over the asperities of each surface. From object to object, in this surrealist and ambiguous world, the tips of my fingers progressively revealed their deceptive tangibility. 

 

I navigate in a theatrical and carnivalesque universe where human forms and animals interact, as big as in reality, with their oxidized skins and their soldered scars. The practice of Caroline Mesquita is that of a metallurgical alchemy, forging figurative sculptures that incarnate the passage of time and the essence of metamorphosis, infinitely modulable. Armed with a brass key, I open doors where I no longer know how to distinguish reality from fantasy. Sometimes interlaced with video, her works weave narratives imprinted with illumination and obscurity. Raw and robust emotions are engraved in the material, as is the spirit of the spectator, in a kingdom where the tangible and the ephemeral converse in whispers. 

 

In the hollow of my ear I listen to the particular crackling of the family home. I contemplate watermelons that I feel like biting into, arranged in place of my grandmother’s dresses in a large wooden armoire. At the rhythm of a meticulous task, Libo Wei makes the materials he employs tell stories. Delicately, by hand, in carefully chosen media, his practice creates universes where memories, nostalgia, and intimate experiences echo. The clash of tradition and modernity to which he is witness in contemporary China offers a poignant reflection on a history we have in common. These saved and recycled relics create sculptural narratives about the changing landscapes of identity. 

 

Caroline Mesquita and Libo Wei capture fragments of life in actual size, which upon closer examination are larger than ourselves. Which life do we talk about when we are witness to the contemporary world? In their works, poetry and the complexity of existence meet. Together, Mesquita and Wei create installations that oscillate between the familiar and the strange, as in dreams – or in reality, I don’t know anymore. To know this, one must approach closer, the better to step back. 

 

The galleries Union Pacific (UK) and Sans Titre (France) exhibit regularly at Art-O-Rama, returning to Marseille almost every summer. For the first time, they present together at Art-O-Rama, to celebrate their longstanding affinity.

 

https://www.unionpacific.co.uk/

https://sanstitre.gallery/

 

 

Caroline Mesquita

Radio (red) (2024)
Patinated brass
56.5 x 44 x 2 cm
Courtesy the artist and Union Pacific © JC Lett

Price upon request

Caroline Mesquita

Key (2024)
Patinated brass
42 x 16.5 x 2 cm
Courtesy the artist and Union Pacific © JC Lett

Price upon request

Caroline Mesquita

Source (2024)
Stainless steel and brass
15 x 4.5 x 11 cm
Courtesy the artist and Union Pacific © JC Lett

Price upon request

Wei Libo

Family birds (Cui Cui) (2023)
Ceramic, wooden marquetry
32 x 32 x 29 cm
Courtesy the artist and Sans Titre © JinYong Lian

Price upon request

Wei Libo

Pure goodness (Mandarin orange no.03) (2023)
Mandarins in wood, drawer, cleaning brush
75 x 40 x 45 cm, unique
Courtesy the artist and Sans Titre © JinYong Lian

Wei Libo

Pure goodness (watermelon) v.01 (2024)
Wooden watermelons (acrylic paint and oil paint), found cabinet, inlaid wood
200 x 100 x 60 cm
Exhibition view, DNSAP, La lune était pleine hier, 2024, École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris

Price upon request