Mathieu Tremblin
Website: www.demodetouslesjours.eu
Exhibitions
Works
Die Gesellschaft der Stadtwanderer
Voelklinger Chronicles #2 „Industrial Music“
Mathieu Tremblin Music kompr KHV
Copyright: Karl Heinrich Veith
Date
2024, in situ
Description
Strasbourg artist Mathieu Tremblin is the driving force behind the Gesellschaft der Stadtwanderer (Company of Urban Wanderers), a collective specially established for the Urban Art Biennale 2024. He spent a number of weeks collecting anecdotes from Völklingen residents, which he then fleshed out into a fairytale/legend-like narrative of Völklingen history. To enable the people of Völklingen to contribute, posters throughout the city published Tremblin’s contact details in advance. Poetic distillations of these anecdotes can now be found posted on walls across the World Heritage Site and in the city of Völklingen. As Tremblin explains, the project met with an enthusiastic response: “Right away, people were interested in talking to us. They wanted to find out what we were doing. For me, that’s the sign of a healthy city. If the place genuinely belongs to the people, they appreciate it when someone brings them something, as with our interventions.” Without doubt, the core of this work is its local content, which has made memories, moments, feelings and moods merge into an urban myth with a character all of its own.
Daniel Bauer
La fumée
Tremblin la fume
Copyright: Weltkulturerbe Völklinger Hütte / Karl Heinrich Veith
Date
2022, in situ
Dimensions
Height 95 cm
Material
Brick, concrete
Description
In La fumée ["Smoke"], as is often the case in Mathieu Tremblin's extraordinarily eclectic, conceptually oriented street art, the artist merges location, formalism, and socio-political commentary. The brick chimney in miniature is modeled after the huge smokestack of the blast furnaces of the Völklinger Hütte World Heritage Site. At the top of the miniature chimney, whence smoke should rise, smoke does rise—but not quite as anticipated and only when the intended interaction with the visitors takes place. Those who look closely will recognize, at the top of the smokestack, small notches like those familiar from ashtrays. And with them, the shared act of "smoking" to which the artist winkingly refers takes on a social and political dimension. "Within the context of the 'Uber-ization' of employment relationships, the cigarette break seems to be the last shared moment together that workers have left to talk about their alienated situation," says Tremblin. Therefore, and as is appropriate, the sculpture stands inside a shelter that was formerly used by the Völklinger Hütte steelworkers for smoking breaks.
Tautological Propaganda
Tremblin 2
Copyright: Weltkulturerbe Völklinger Hütte / Karl Heinrich Veith
Date
2022, in situ
Dimensions
2,7 x 14 m
Material
Paper
Description
The Strasbourg-based artist Mathieu Tremblin can be described, without exaggeration, as a master of urban conceptualism—providing the designation is permitted to encompass playful visuality and, for all the heterogeneity, biting commentary. The creator of Tag Clouds, which went viral on the net, has a penchant for confronting the supposed certainties of the in-scene and society. "French Street-art Artist Finally Makes Graffiti Legible," read Musikexpress's headline in regard to his famous project. With artists like Tremblin, graffiti and street art have entered an era of self-reflection. Tremblin's work Tautological Propaganda adroitly disassembles the fashion-brand trivialization and commercialization of the artwork of the street artist Shepard Fairey, who is internationally renowned above all for his iconic Obama poster. Fairey helped himself to quotes from John Carpenter's capitalism-critical cult film They Live! (1988) when creating a critical image for his Obey campaign, which Fairey then subsequently evolved into his fashion brand, Obey Clothing. Tremblin, also with reference to Carpenter's film, turns his attention to the consumers of Fairey's clothing and, by feeding their social media posts through a 'sunglasses filter,' makes the true capitalist face visible—in this case, that of purchasable urban art styles.
Tautological Propaganda
2022, in situ