Jacques Mahé de La Villeglé
Rue du Temple — manuscrite
1968
In the late 1940s the French artist Jacques Villeglé first introduced décollage, an artistic practice that entailed collecting torn poster fragments from public spaces as readymade artworks. In 1960 his interest in new modes of realism prompted him to join the Nouveaux Réalistes, a group of artists known for utilizing everyday urban materials. Rue du Temple is named for the location where Villeglé found the scraps that comprise this work. Using the remnants of defaced propaganda posters, he presented, on one hand, a palimpsestic patchwork of textual fragments abstractly evoking France’s national tricolor flag. On the other hand, the fragmented words and phrases peppering Villeglé’s canvas—“for the workers,” “for reform,” “solidarity”— reveal legible traces of the political rhetoric and vandalism in the tide of leftist protest that swept through Paris in 1968. Through these different strategies Rue du Temple archives the realities of a society torn asunder by contesting sociopolitical visions. [Permanent collection label, 2016]
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Artist
Jacques Mahé de La Villeglé
(French, 1926–2022)
- Title Rue du Temple — manuscrite
- Date 1968
- Medium Torn posters mounted on canvas
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Dimensions
unframed | 45 5/8 x 31 13/16 in.
- Credit line University purchase with funds from Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shoenberg; Mrs. R. A. Frevert in memory of her son; the Samuel Kootz Gallery; Rabbi and Mrs. F. M. Isserman; Mr. and Mrs. James W. Singer, Jr.; and Mr. and Mrs. John Shoenberg, by exchange, 2011
- Object number WU 2011.0008
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Technique
décollage
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Work type
décollage
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Theme
War and Conflict
Activism and Protest
Poetry and Writing
Moving Parts: Time and Motion in Contemporary Art
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University in St. Louis, 05/09/2014 - 08/31/2014
La beauté est dans la rue
Galeries du Théâtre (Cherbourg, France)
4/28/2011
Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois (Paris, France)
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