Re-place _Cyril Aboucaya, Antoine Donzeaud, Matthieu Palud, Clara Stengel __cur. Elisa Rigoulet __12.9–19.9.13
press release
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Antoine Donzeaud, Seladnav 1, 2 & 3, 2013
Toiles retournées sur châssis
Exo Exo
Cyril Aboucaya, Stéphanie, 2013
toile synthétique sur MDF, bois
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Antoine Donzeaud, Neuf Cyclistes, 2013
MDF, éditions
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Clara Stengel, Réplique, 2013
MDF, peinture
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Cyril Aboucaya, Caroline, 2013
toile synthétique sur MDF, bois
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Re-place, 2013
Exhibition view, Exo Exo, Paris
Exo Exo
Matthieu Palud, Sans titre, 2013
huile sur toile
Exo Exo
Matthieu Palud, Sans titre, 2013
huile sur toile
Exo Exo
Matthieu Palud, Sans titre, 2013
huile sur toile
Exo Exo
Matthieu Palud, Sans titre, 2013
huile sur toile
Exo Exo
Matthieu Palud, Sans titre, 2013
huile sur toile


Exo#1 Re-place is the first exhibition presented in the space located at 10ter rue Bisson, in Paris.

Re-place is about alternative layout.

Displayed without any consideration of specific functionality, the objects and images presented here seem to have been created on different scales with independent stories.
Their encounter interrupts the narrative and raises the question of the object's definition in terms of layout, place, and positioning.
The apparent dysfunctionality defers to the space heights which makes us regard each object in its own distance and according to its own user manual. In the formal presentation and the display of its process and content, each form suggests its own continuity and independence.
Suggesting that each object belongs to a group with the same DNA, and that inside this global presentation, each object retains its individual assembly and exhibiting entity.

– Elisa Rigoulet