As the vibrant art scene in Dubai continues to flourish, Firetti Contemporary gallery is set to host Colour Gives Me Life, a group exhibition celebrating the evocative power of color. Among the featured artists is the acclaimed French talent Laurent Perbos, whose innovative works challenge the boundaries between playfulness and conceptual depth.
Known for his ability to transform everyday objects into striking visual statements, Perbos blends humor, emotion, and intellectual curiosity in his practice. Ahead of his Dubai debut, we spoke with the artist about his creative journey, his perspective on the universal language of color, and what visitors can expect from his contribution to this dynamic exhibition.
Why/when have you decided to be an artist? If you imagined doing something else, what profession would you choose?
I have always been fascinated, since I was very young, by coloring and the exercise of shapes. So, I naturally turned to an artistic course in art school. Unlike a profession, a political commitment or a destination, I don’t think we choose to start an artistic career. Art is not determined by a choice and I have always considered it as a state. Art is as if inscribed in my person, it is a permanent state, a way of being, considered in its lasting nature. I must admit that I never imagined doing anything other than the work of my own hands.
What artists or art movements have influenced you?
My sculptures are part of a practice of assemblage, initiated by the New Realists. It is an artistic approach “which does not shy away from its pleasure” and which fully embraces its aesthetic side, in particular because it is not limited to that.
I am part of a generation of artists who started in the 90s who no longer believe in the artistic radicalism of the 60s and who are no longer convinced that they can bring about important social changes through their art alone. It is therefore with a certain nuance of irony and (apparently) without ideology that I have an obvious interest in social interactions in almost all of my works. Some can also lend themselves to a political interpretation.
Why have you selected sports as the main theme of your work? What are your favorite mediums?
I’m interested in sport because people are interested in sport! The objects that I chose to manipulate in my first sculptures were sporting articles, well known to everyone and offering an undeniable connection with the public. What better starting point to create new situations of exchange with the spectator, if not sport? These moments of distraction and play introduce, within the walls of the white cube, rules which, although known to everyone, remain very far from those of the exhibition modalities.
Generally speaking, my works mainly concern mass and entertainment activities from popular culture (gaming, sport, DIY, etc.), all with a logic of diversion. First a painter, I then became a sculptor to avoid the problems inherent to the media. I am interested in the formation of a new formal vocabulary, somewhere between painting and sculpture, born from associations between forms, materials and ideas.
What techniques do you use when creating your work and what role does interaction play in your creations?
From certain favorite objects, I have managed to develop, throughout these years of creation, a real plastic language, a vocabulary of shapes and materials, certain elements of which punctuate all of my work in a recurring manner. These elements are in particular everyday objects that I assemble or re-interpret. Unlike an original work, the familiar shape of the everyday object saves the viewer time to decipher what they perceive. When we transform a characteristic of an object such as its weight, its size or its color, we obtain an unusual object, projecting the viewer into a surreal situation. This sort of visual and semantic collision disturbs the viewer and projects them into a new typology. I seek to provoke a strong visual impact on the viewer, which I nourish by using associations of contrasting ideas and contradictory materials underlined by a primary color chart, specific to mass retail companies.
I have included my practice in a register of popular references, which establishes a certain complicity between the work and the public, relying on the idea of a collective sensitivity and considering “art as a state of encounter “. My intention is to create works as a ground for exchange, both physical and intellectual.
For example, in the series of works related to sport, I recover components from already existing games, such as ping-pong tables or footballs, whose codes I divert. The spectator is offered games, a priori well defined which, at a given moment, move away from their goals, transgress their rules and offer another reflection on the notions of failure and success, competitiveness and competition, entertainment or work.
Let’s talk about your latest work for the Olympics – the inspiration, the process, the challenges and most importantly, the message.
The theme of myth is largely present in some of my exhibitions. I see the exhibition as an initiatory tale where the hero (the spectator) sets out to meet charismatic characters. This entire journey now leads me to focus my work on ancient statuary and the avatars it has produced throughout the History of art. Even today, many artistic works are inspired by this. What motivates my new plastic research is not a particular sculpture but rather the archetype of the ancient statue. It is the latter that interests me and that I wish to use, as a material, in a real work of sculpture.
The history of the world is inscribed in the marble of the statues, and Paris, the museum city with its numerous artistic testimonies, reflects this heritage. This year, as part of the Olympic Games, Paris becomes the world capital of sport. To respond to the National Assembly’s proposal to exhibit a work during the Olympic Games, I had the idea of combining ancient sculptures and sport to create Beauty and Gesture.
The Venus de Milo, an ancient work, kept at the Louvre Museum, is one of the 5 best-known statues in the world. And it is quite intuitively that I chose to reinterpret it in this project for the National Assembly. When it was discovered on the island of Milos in Greece in 1821, the statue lacking its arms gave rise to many hypotheses as to its original posture: was it holding the apple of Paris? Was she leaning on the shoulder of Mars? Was she looking at herself in a shield?
To nourish this imagination, I projected the Venus de Milo into the contemporary world, and I invite her to participate in the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. Thus, 2000 years after Ovid, the famous statue covers her arms and stands out today today in various sporting disciplines: tennis, surfing, basketball, archery, boxing and javelin.
Like the Olympic rings symbolizing the five continents, the Venuses display several colors of the chromatic prism. They thus evoke the colors of the rainbow, and without being directly associated with the LGBTQIA+ movement (the colors are out of order here), this work wishes to be perceived as a strong reminder of equal rights, fight against hatred and discrimination.
The postures of Venus embody emblematic sports of the Olympic and Paralympic Games. This is why I gave Venus in the archer’s posture a single arm, a clear desire to represent Paralympism. To push the idea of equality further, the feminine image embodied par excellence by the Venus de Milo, shakes up the collective imagination which still too often associates sport with masculinity. The Venus de Milo is a representation of Aphrodite, goddess of beauty. In this new configuration, endowed with sporting attributes, these six Venuses become an ode to the beautiful gesture: that of the sportswoman who, in a final effort to achieve the feat, seems to be “touched by the grace of the Gods”. In short, “Beauty and Gesture” reflects inclusiveness, strong values supported by Olympism.
What were the results of your work exhibited during the 2024 Olympic Games and what new opportunities did it bring you?
When the project to exhibit “La Beauté et le Geste” on the steps of the National Assembly was approved, I did not immediately think about the success that the work could have with the press, or with the general public. No, what crossed my mind was the incredible opportunity that this exhibition offered: that of producing a unique image, capable of making an impression and perhaps lastingly inscribing itself in history.
Very quickly there was a craze for this work and I was delighted to see that the enthusiasm generated by this project in France also conquered the international scene. I hope to have transmitted through this work a vision of a more inclusive Olympic spirit, shaking up the collective imagination that still too often associates sport with a standardized masculinity and which frequently excludes women and people with disabilities.
Today, I am fully aware of the international influence that my works have acquired thanks to this exhibition during the Paris 2024 Olympic Games. The next exhibition projects that are proposed to me take place abroad. For example, a new version of “La Beauté et le Geste” is currently being exhibited in Shanghai. Moving from Paris to an avant-garde metropolis like Shanghai is a fascinating experience for me. Paris, with its neoclassical architecture, its 19th century heritage and its romantic nostalgia, belongs to another era. New York, often associated with the 20th century and modernity, also contrasts with cities like Seoul, Tokyo, Shanghai or Dubai, which resolutely embody the 21st century.
How do you feel about your work coming to Dubai for the first time and what are your expectations?
Today, the opportunity to exhibit in Dubai, in collaboration with the Firetti Contemporary gallery, particularly excites me. This opening towards new territories, new horizons and new audiences is in perfect harmony with my current artistic aspirations. Indeed, I have always conceived art as a space of exploration, a permanent quest. To be honest, today I have more ideas than time to bring them to life! These ideas are the fruit of long-term research, which allowed me to develop a plastic vocabulary based on contrasts of colors, materials, shapes and symbols, in order to create sculptures with a strong visual impact. And it is the result of all these years of work that I wish to share through this new collaboration.