• MERCURIAL by Martin Huger
  • MERCURIAL by Martin Huger
  • MERCURIAL by Martin Huger
  • MERCURIAL by Martin Huger
  • MERCURIAL by Martin Huger
  • MERCURIAL by Martin Huger

MERCURIAL by Martin Huger

215 x 320mm, 160 pages, Colour printing, Perfect bound, Softcover, Edition of 500, 2023

Together with pins, nails, tape, glue, and staples, it’s often just simple magnets that have been used to place objects in tension within the body of work presented here. Martin Huger’s artistic approach triggers our understanding of and relationship to the binary forces of attraction and repulsion that appear to govern our lives. The constructions and images he confronts us with reveal that analogous forces are at work in the constant pushing and pulling that reshapes a metropolitan area as well as in the strategies of persuasion commonly used in advertising, fashion and marketing. Hopping on a path made of invisible semantic associations, the artist has consciously let one word or thought attract another. This process forms an eclectic narrative around the notions of elevation, navigation and capital, as if they were bound together by a magnetic field.

Transitioning away from a career in the fashion world to take up a solitary artistic practice in 2021, his daily commute shifted from the glamorous streets of the city center to peripheral boulevards when he moved to a studio space located on the twenty-ninth floor of one of the iconic Mercuriales office buildings in the east of Paris. Bagnolet, the town where the two towers sprung up from the earth in the seventies, was meant to develop into a thriving centre for business and trade. Instead, it has come to expose the flip-side of the metropolis’ magnetism and its streets have become home for people in need, who found themselves pushed back into the fringes of the capital.

Salvaging scrap materials from the streets and finding objects that belonged to the past life of the building as an office space, Huger has accumulated a vocabulary of tiny nameless and shapeless things on his desk. Tinkering for hours with these raw materials, vertical tower-like constructions as well as rafts and other vessels started to emerge while staring out at the cityscape from the large studio windows — an artist turned bored office worker, who creates in an act of resilience, as a way to challenge the slow passing of time.

Each of Huger’s pieces has its way of revealing how it was constructed—nothing is concealed. Their importance lies less in their particular final forms than in the fact that they are fundamentally explorations of potential—they are things in transit, in becoming. This notion of potential frequently returns through the figures of the child and the model, whether a model posing for an advertisement in a glossy magazine, or representing a spatial projection as seen in the workshop of an architectural office.

Published by

Building Fictions

Regular price £26.00