The Permanence
Mary Sue
SILENCE! Silence in the room ... I want to hear a pin drop and the first one who will amuse the gallery will be recorded permanently!
Bzzzzz! As usual!
Mary Sue made its copies:
They are all focused on the homeworks more or less in the program, properly installed in the gallery Rabouan Moussion for a general review that lasted 29 X 24 or 696 hours, the longest of all time. The subject is really tedious.
For example, consider a specific case:
Assuming that basic math is not the first quality of Mary Sue (especially multi-stage complex formulas with lots of unknowns), but if one considers that the time she spends on the benches of the school to use its panties is proportional to what she learns, then it is concluded that school and Mary Sue, it is for life.
"Well Sir, does it count for the average? "
The Permanence is the name given to this new exhibition. The term encompasses both the character of what is constant, frozen in time and space, and the name given to the study rooms where students gather for two hours between classes or learning sessions. A moment of respite for some of them, or an hour devoted to lessons for other ones. Here, the relationship between a child learning to be an futur adult and the feeling of freedom of this same child, come together (not without fault) with the irony and inconsistencies revealed by this new series, this new laboratory. If one wants to admit that life in school is the school of life, Mary Sue is already what she will become. Its future is engraved on the desk, its present is her future: her time.
The photography and video installation The torture of the good student set the stage for a place to study in every way. As for the classroom of sciences "physical and social" that you have to dissect with a scalpel, that for the spectator under duress to take his role as general superintendent very seriously (because of the little respect that serious students and her comrades seem to observe for schools furniture).
The recent prints made for some of them with a childish rage and idolatrous (Study on Study), indicating the current state of this class today. Others point out in a fictional manner glance playful, the fate reserved for the best dunces (Early works).
Mary Sue