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“Flow” is a new installation by Parisian artist Baptiste Debombourg at the Centre d’Art Actuel l’Oeil de Poisson in Québec, Canada. The artist invites visitors to walk on its “waves” of shattered and repurposed windshields. Similar to his Aerial installation…
‘Baptiste Debombourg’s solo exhibition at the Centre d’Art Actuel l’Oeil de Poisson in Québec showcased Flow. The work – which is made entirely from car windscreens – is meant to mirror the devastating effects of mass consumption. Flow’s cumulative mass of materials is arranged in such a way that it resembles a giant wave – much like those in apocalyptic films such as 2012 or The Day After Tomorrow. Debombourg invites the audience to question society and self-induced finiteness. Do we swim in a sea of windscreens? Or do we remain under the glass, suffering as if trapped beneath sheets of ice?’ (via Frame)
A spectacular tidal wave of shattered and repurposed windshields fill a room. “Here the windshields surge up like the wave that engulfs towns in catastrophic films such as 2012 or The Day After Tomorrow. They are broken, discarded, ignored objects that take the place by storm, rebel and attack us.”