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El Sitio oficial de Arman
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kanal ArmanArman Interviewed by Michel Giroud

Ever since his childhood, until he left art school, Arman never ceased to draw or make sketches. All his future word is already prepared. Like with the old masters, it is outlined and planned out with diagrams, schemes and graphic notes. Such preparation with drawings and texts allows the precision of each project to be understood. A clear approach to the whole work, and a theoretical reasoning, consistent to each piece, predetermined like a musical score “in progress”, leaves nothing to chance while the work is executed by Arman and his assistants. Like Picasso, there have been hundreds of notebooks and sketchpads. Arman’s ideas are not revealed by a theoretical body of declarations, but by a series of drawings. His aesthetics should be considered from the point of view of the systematic in which chance is calculated and controlled. In this way, a veritable set theory is constructed – a combination of his personal taste, his own family context and art of his time. Arman renovates and makes more profound the role of the object in our society, and today he offers a new reading of his work which is part of a general concern with the systematic. The Accumulations have such a breadth and power that it is clear Arman has invented a style and a vision that is among one of the greatest.

In a interview with Michel Giroud, Arman specified the importance of the systematic in his work.

“The systematic manifests itself in the way of working, of thinking, of exploring variations of an idea. I cannot begin a series of works until it has been planned out. I continue to experiment with different variations until I reach a certain point of disgust. For example with the paintings, after getting tired of the “all over chaud”, I’ll begin a cold series – the same with the accumulations of the collection. Otherwise the diversity, by its repetition, leads to a warming up. I proceed as with a piano, with chromatic or normal scales. I systematize them by the number of pieces chosen, by the strategy used bArman work Fly Toxy the number of pieces made. My approach is conceptual, rational, not at all instinctive. Chance , despite its appearance, is secondary. Only in two cases does it play a role : when I break an object, like a cello, the pieces stay right where the fell. Otherwise there is chance in the auto-compositions of objects within a volume.  But even though they are restricted by the choice of volume and of the object, they are not chosen by chance – they are elected objects, like the coffeepots, the tools, the cameras, the coffee grinders, There is a series of utensils with definite characteristics whose organic aspects interest me, like the irons, the fans, the flytox… In general they tend to be objects of my generation, and not objects with a contemporary, slick design which, for me, lack character. But it’s not impossible that one day I would use a series of sport shoes, like basketball sneakers, because they have a special character, original and surprising – a dynamic asymmetry. That which we take for chance often has a calculated imbalance that follows a rhythm. That’s what struck me about the traditional Japanese composition with its alternation between the void and the full. My taste for systems is related to the notion of filling up. Since I was a child I had a penchant for the quantity. It began as a series of jam jars, and later in 1954, it was the revelation of Pollock’s “all over”.

My passion for the cut, for cutting up, also comes from my childhood; my father loved those world fairs where the technical achievements of the present and the future were displayed. At the expositions where I accompanied my father, there were certain objects (cars, cameras) that were cut open to demonstrate how their mechanisms functioned. It’s from there that I got the idea to of cutting up unusual objects like violins and coffee grinders, and began in 1969 to show the interior of thing, the intestines of objects. The objects are cut up like words and they form hybrids, new words, new objects. The cuts in the cement are like fossils of possible objects to come. It was Picasso, who with Analytic Cubism opened the way to cutting up with a systematic variation of planes. “Coupes et colères” is the outcome of Picasso’s discovery. Van Gogh, Cézanne, the great Japanese woodcuts, Duchamp, Man Ray Schwitters with his collages, Pollock – they all made this approach possible, which is precisely in keeping with the context of art of our century and which traverses my own personal history.”


(1)    The interviews with Otto Hahn, “Mémoires accumulées”, published by edition Belfond, 1992, reveal Arman’s uncompromising lucidity on art and its milieu, on his ideas and their elaboration. The caltalogue raisonné is published by la Différence and the catalogue raisonné of prints was published by Marval. It is odd that no museum retrospective in France has ever shown the scope of such a work.

source : Kanal - Special Serie Arman - 1993


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