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Nicolas Bayer
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To
create his images, Nicolas Baier frequently uses a digital
scanner to systematically scan the surface of things,
and then he reassembles the different fragments obtained
into a new composition. The result of this procedure can
be seen in the work Planète (2003), a
monumental circular image that appears to bring us closer
to the surface of a heavenly body. If we are attentive,
however, we are gradually transported, through an effect
resembling the cinematic travelling shot, to a bird’s-eye
view above a round table. The planet’s roundness
is suddenly eclipsed by the texture of a table with a
distressed surface. Exploring the image further, we encounter
a hint of perspective on the dark side of the globe. We
immediately return to an earthly environment, but this
time we are in a landscape. The multiple layers, the sense
of transference and condensation, like that of visual
interference, constantly confuse the relationship between
the spaces depicted. This tactic also produces unexpected
visual shifts from surface to depth, as well as a kind
of telescoping between spaces. The depth of the image
creates the illusion that time is unfolding, as though
the visual force of each of these strata reproduced the
effect of a film sequence that cannot be erased from our
perception. Thus, each time our eye is caught by a space
rising to the surface, the preceding space shifts to the
background, is deferred, or at least is perceived through
the pictorial matter in which it now seems enveloped.
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Nicolas Baier, Planète, 2003, Lambda print,
diameter 305 cm. Courtesy of the artist.
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