Jean-Michel Sanejouand
Jean-Michel Sanejouand (18 July 1934 – 18 March 2021) was a French artist. His work ranged from environments to monumental sculptures, from readymade-like objects, to paintings of oneiric landscapes in which (usually) one of his sculptures stands.
Jean-Michel Sanejouand  | |
|---|---|
| Born | July 18, 1934[1] Lyon, France  | 
| Died | March 18, 2021 (aged 86)[1] Maine-et-Loire, France[1]  | 
| Nationality | French | 
| Known for | Sculpture, painting | 
Biography
    
Born in Lyon, France, in 1934, he received a degree in law from the Institut d'études politiques de Lyon in 1955.[2] He lived and worked in Paris between 1959 and 1993.
His work can be encapsulated in a series of distinct periods, which the artist titled.
From 1962 to 1963, he worked on a series of sculptural paintings that he called "Charge-Objets" (English: "Charge-Objects").[3]
From 1969 to 1974 he created a series of works under the general title of "Organisations d'espace" (English: "Space Organizations").[4][5]
He died 17 March 2021 at his home in Maine-et-Loire, France.[1]
Solo exhibitions
    
- 1967 "Première organisation d'espace", Ecole Polytechnique (Paris).
 - 1968 "Deux organisations d'espace", Galerie Yvon Lambert (Paris).
 - 1973 "Les Organisations d'espace de Sanejouand", Centre National d'Art Contemporain (Paris).[6]
 - 1979 "Espaces-Peintures", The Antwerp Gallery, FIAC (Paris).
 - 1982 "Espaces-Peintures", Lens Fine Art Gallery (Antwerp, Belgium).
 - 1986 "Rétrospective: des Charges-Objets aux Espaces-Peintures", Palais des Beaux-Arts (Lyon, France).
 - 1991 "Espaces-Peintures 1978-1986", MAC (Villeneuve d'Ascq, France).[7]
 - 1991 "Les Charges-Objets 1963-1967", Galerie Froment-Putman (Paris).[8]
 - 1995 "Rétrospective 1963-1995", MNAM Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris).[9]
 - 1996 "Peintures", Galerie Barbier, FIAC (Paris).
 - 2002 "Libre et Change", Galerie Chez Valentin (Paris).
 - 2005 "Sanejouand", Le Plateau (Paris).
 - 2011 "Espaces et Cie", Galerie MAM, Drawing now, Carrousel du Louvre (Paris).
 - 2012 "Retrospectivement", Frac des Pays de la Loire (Carquefou), HAB gallery (Nantes), as part of "Jean Michel Sanejouand's year in Pays de la Loire".[10][11]
 - 2015 "Un peu d'espace(s)", Galerie Art : Concept (Paris).
 - 2018 "Beyond color", Galerie Art : Concept (Paris).
 - 2018 "Operation contact", Galerie Kreo (Paris and London).
 
Group exhibitions
    
- 1967 "Superlund", Lunds Konstall (Sweden). Curator: Pierre Restany. Also featuring: Arman, Christo, Erik Dietman, Yona Friedman, François Morellet, Jean-Pierre Raynaud, Nicolas Schöffer, Constantin Xenakis...
 - 1976 Venice Biennale, French pavilion (Italy). Curator: Pierre Restany. Also featuring: Fred Forest, Raymond Hains, Alain Jacquet, Bertrand Lavier, Jean-Pierre Raynaud...
 - 1986 "Qu'est-ce que l'art français ?" (What is French art ?), Toulouse (France). Curator: Bernard Lamarche-Vadel. Also featuring: Erik Dietman, Robert Filliou, Gérard Garouste, Gérard Gasiorowski, Jacques Villeglé...
 - 1992 Universal Exposition of Seville, French pavilion (Seville, Spain).
 - 1999 "Les Champs de la Sculpture" (Sculptures of Champs-Élysées), where "Le Silence" was first exhibited. Also featuring: Tony Cragg, Erik Dietman, Barry Flanagan, Raymond Hains, Keith Haring, Jean-Pierre Raynaud, Bernar Venet, Lawrence Weiner...[12]
 - 2006 "La force de l'Art", Grand Palais (Paris). Curator: Anne Tronche.
 - 2012 "Ends of the earth: Land Art to 1974", MOCA (Los Angeles, USA).
 - 2015 "Cycle des histoires sans fin", MAMCO (Geneva, Switzerland).
 - 2020 "Platform: Paris/Brussels", David Zwirner's online viewing room.
 
Monumental sculptures
    
- 1996 "Le Silence" (The Silence), a bronze sculpture whose largest version is two meters high. Until 2019, It was installed in a private park of sculptures near Biarritz (France).
 - 2005 Le Magicien (The Magician), a five-meters high bronze, installed in the gardens of Palais Saint-Georges, close to the railway station of Rennes (France).[13]
 
Collections
    
    
Bibliography
    
- Les organisations d'espaces de Jean-Michel Sanejouand (1967-1974), Frédéric Herbin and Jean-Michel Sanejouand
 
Footnotes
    
- "Disparition de l'artiste Jean-Michel Sanejouand - lejournaldesarts.fr". Le Journal Des Arts (in French).
 - "Sanejouand, Jean-Michel". Benezit Dictionary of Artists. 2011. doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.B00160414. ISBN 978-0-19-977378-7.
 - Duman, Bertrand (February 2017). "CHARGE-OBJECTS". l'Oeuil. No. 698.
 -  Herbin, Frédéric. Jean-Michel Sanejouand's Organisations d'espaces: 1967-1974. 
{{cite book}}:|website=ignored (help) - Grosenick, Uta; Stange, Raimar (2005). Insight - Inside: Galerien 1945 bis heute. DuMont. ISBN 978-3-8321-7202-2.
 - Les Organisations d'espaces de Sanejouand, by Pierre Restany, Blaise Gautier and Claude-Louis Renard, Centre National d'Art Contemporain eds, Paris, 1973.
 - Jean-Michel Sanejouand : Espaces-Peintures 1978-1986, by Michel Enrici and Joelle Pijaudier, Musée d'Art Moderne de Villeneuve-d'Ascq/La Différence eds, Lille, 1991.
 - Jean-Michel Sanejouand : Les Charges-Objets 1963-1967, by Bernard Lamarche-Vadel, Fondation Fine Art of The Century/La Différence eds, Paris, 1990.
 - Jean-Michel Sanejouand, Rétrospective 1963-1995, by François Barré, Robert Fleck, Germain Viatte and Fabrice Hergott, Centre Georges Pompidou eds, Paris, 1995.
 - "Jean-Michel Sanejouand, Retrospectively…". www.e-flux.com. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
 - Jean-Michel Sanejouand : Retrospectivement, by Anne Tronche and Julie Potier, Skyra eds, Paris, 2012 (ISBN 978-2081282704).
 - "Les Champs de la Sculpture 2000", Beaux-Arts Magazine, Hors série, Paris.
 - "Le Magicien — WikiRennes". www.wiki-rennes.fr. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
 - Pompidou, Musée national d’art moderne-Centre (28 August 2020). "Musée national d'art moderne – Centre Pompidou". Navigart.fr (in French).
 - "Rechercher et voir les oeuvres". www.lescollectionsdesfrac.fr.
 - Lyon, Musée d’art contemporain de (3 December 2020). "Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon". Navigart.fr (in French).
 - "Philadelphia Museum of Art - Collections : Search Collections". www.philamuseum.org.