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Livre publié à l’occasion de l’exposition personnelle de Mélanie Matranga au Palais de Tokyo, « 反复 », 21.10 2015 – 10.01 2016

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Thomas Boutoux : Tu as emménagé dans un nouvel atelier pour pouvoir produire les pièces de ton exposition au Palais de Tokyo, notamment tous les objets et les sculptures en silicone qui lui donneront sa couleur et sa matérialité. Que peut-on voir dans l’atelier aujourd’hui, plusieurs semaines avant l’ouverture de l’exposition ?

Mélanie Matranga : À l’atelier, on a fait une espèce de plafond un peu bourgeois avec une rosace au centre. C’est un motif qui va se répéter sur de très grandes tentures qui formeront un plafond dans l’espace d’exposition. Il y a d’autres pièces que nous avions déjà faites avant, en silicone.

Benjamin Thorel : Mais du silicone plutôt sale…

MM : Oui, c’est dégueulasse et désinvolte.

BT : Tu as mis au point une technique de moulage sur objets ?

MM : J’enduis les objets, les tissus, de colle vinylique, et ensuite je coule le silicone dessus. Parfois on fait des housses. Pour les canapés, par exemple, je fais des housses en voilage, j’étale le silicone et tout ça est démoulé en plusieurs parties, pour obtenir une contre-forme en silicone. Pour les armoires, il y a toute une armature en tissu et en bâche, qui est recouverte de silicone, pour conserver la forme, les gonds. Comme elles vont être suspendues au plafond, ça permet d’avoir une tenue.

TB : Ces objets sont plus « mous » que ceux que tu montrais il y a quelques années quand tu rigidifiais les surfaces de lits ou de canapés à l’aide de colle.

MM : Oui, pour moi, ça n’a pas du tout le même sens : figer un geste, ou retirer une forme.

BT : Qu’est-ce que tu entends par « figer » des gestes ?

COMPLEXE OU COMPLIQUÉConversation entre Mélanie Matranga, Thomas Boutoux et Benjamin Thorel

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p. 54 – 57Tribute to you (2015)Impressions sur PVC vinyle / Prints on PVC vinylCourtesy de l’artiste / of the artist et / and Keizo Kitajima

Fortune light (2015)Installation de 20 lampes en papier / Installation of 20 paper lampsCourtesy de l’artiste / of the artist

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白天和黑夜 (2015)Mezzanine en bois, lits, colle vinylique / Wood platform, beds, vinyl glueCourtesy de l’artiste / of the artist

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Introduced by French colonisation, celebrations of the New Year in Jàa villages in South-West Burkina Faso start on January the 1st and can continue for several days. This has gradually become a time for collective festivities during which certain songs and dances have acquired a particular, if not unique, place of expression, above all in the village of Sedongio. What has arised is a form of the sacred as transgression—subject upon which reflected Georges Bataille, Roger Caillois and Michel Leiris—which makes use of a paradoxical form of saying. Apparently intransitive and based on foreclosure, this celebration allows to consider how Jàa society has come to be in the world. It is in the middle of the afternoon that groups of female singers and male musicians begin their performance. After having saluted in song the land chief, the troop of singers wanders through the maze of paths of the village, like the Rara bands in Haiti, headed by houngan voodoo priests. Guided by several musicians, they sing and dance in people’s yards, on the market square, on the lanes and in the bars where millet beer can be imbibed. When it arrives in a family courtyard, the troop hails the head of the household in song, then he gives them a drink in return. As taught by Goffmanian sociology, these salutations pertain to a sacred rite coming from their everyday, reciprocal nature. They attest to the acceptance of a relationship and, thus, participate in the production of a society. But, at New Year, they can be refused in improvised song: “You may salute us, but as for him, we won’t salute him!” The contestation of this social imperative in a song of ostracism shows the existence of underlying conflicts. In fact, it leads to the violation of the conventions that allow for an exchange, and to the endangerment of society itself. This breaking down of the discourse can also be seen in the identity of the addressee of a song in memory of the former land chief Dougoutigi, who was accused of witchcraft at his death. Constructed on a series of interpellations, it aims at opening up a dialogue with those who have died during the past year.

SPEAKING AND CURSING IN SONGBy Delphine Manetta

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He spoke to us and Dougoutigi spoke trueHe spoke to us and Dougoutigi had told us clairvoyantlyThat after his death, the village would prosperHe is dead and now the village does indeed prosperVillage life has improvedHe spoke to us, Dougoutigi spoke to usHe told us, Dougoutigi told usThat once he was dead, the village would prosperHe spoke to us and Dougoutigi spoke trueHe spoke to us and Dougoutigi told us clairvoyantlyWhen you see him, tell him in the land of the deadThat village life has improvedVillage life has improvedWhen you see him, speak to him in the land of the deadSpeak to him and say that the “tar” has arrived in the villageExplain to him that the “tar” has arrived in the villageWhen he was there, the “tar” didn’t existTimes now are better, the “tar” has arrived in the villageIt has arrived in the village, the “tar” has arrived in the villageWhen he was there, the Jàa didn’t “eat” goldTimes now are better, they can “eat” goldHe told them that to “eat” gold was forbiddenTimes now are better, the ban has been lifted

An intimate dialogue with the dead opens a breach between the human world and the supernatural one, showing these festivities to be exceptional; this also leads to the lifting of religious bans, such as dealing in gold. The extra-ordinary context of the New Year, created by this evocation of the dead, then allows men and women to perform funeral dances, normally reserved to periods of mourning. Everywhere in the village, until dawn, the inhabitants dance to “bury” the year which has passed and put an end to the journey of the deceased to the land of the dead. In this respect, the practice of dances devoted to the dead gives these New Year celebrations the appearance of a liminal ritual, comparable to a “grand funeral.” The point is to bring about the passage between two states, by taking care of the end of a calendar cycle. The celebration as a revolution, which is both temporal and spatial, thus lies in the definition of both masculine and feminine gender identities. The men parody the funereal dance of the women, and the women that of the men, to such an extent that genders seem to merge. This unexpected cross-dressing of some men as women and vice versa brings out the ambiguity of genders even more. However, the occupation of space by the wandering female singers, as well as the

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Photographies / Photographs :dora-diamant (couverture / cover ; p. 1 ; p. 3 ; p. 6-12 ; p. 14 ; p. 77-83 ; p. 85-87 ; p. 89-91).Marilou Chabert (p. 2 ; p. 4-5 ; p. 13 ; p. 84 ; p. 88).