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Tuesday, 19 November 2024

Apocalyptic sandscape revealed as MONA's next scene stealer

Acclaimed French artist Théo Mercier has been unveiled as the man behind the next major installation at Hobart’s MONA museum.

Mercier, 40, is a contemporary sculptor and stage director who splits his time between Paris and Mexico City.

He is about to begin construction on an immense sand sculpture that will inhabit MONA's former library space.

To be created in situ from sand and water, DARK TOURISM will depict a debris-strewn landscape evoking the aftermath of disaster. It will open for viewing in February, 2025.

MONA owner and founder David Walsh says: "When Théo was last in Hobart he said he was 'going for a walk.' He walked to the top of kunanyi (Mount Wellington). He’s back, and he’ll be doing something just as mad at MONA."

Mercier’s site-specific installation will be a new work commissioned by MONA and its presentation will be his first time exhibiting in Australia. 

The installation will take inspiration from the notion of ‘dark tourism’: our human propensity to seek out and travel to places associated with suffering and death. 

Tourists have long made visits to sites charged with history’s grim residue, from Pompeii to Auschwitz, the catacombs of Paris to the Cambodian killing fields, Hiroshima to Ground Zero, and Tasmania’s Port Arthur, the MONA team points out. 

DARK TOURISM is also a commentary on earth’s changing climate and its impact on the environment and humanity. 

Visitors to MONA are promised a scene reminiscent of the wake of a hurricane, landslide or tsunami. 

"Crafted entirely from Tasmanian sand, Théo's work is a reminder of the fragile and temporary nature of the world around us, and of life itself," says MONA curator Sarah Wallace. 

"I hope visitors will be drawn in by the intricate detail in this captivating installation, while reflecting on the questions he raises about how we cope with catastrophe."
 

A recent Mercier sandscape in Prague


Mercier asks: "What does it mean to sculpt catastrophe, or to construct collapse? 

"Like others who have painted ruins in the past, DARK TOURISM is about sculpting contemporary ruins, which are also natural disasters. 

"Faced with this frozen landscape, humans find themselves at the heart of the devastation, as spectators and consumers. 

"But there's something contradictory about this project, something romantic and utopian at the same time. Because the sand allows the world to tremble and shuffle itself in infinite figures."

Théo Mercier: DARK TOURISM will run at MONA from Saturday, February 15, 2025, until Monday, February 16, 2026. 

Images: Jérôme Lobato, and Gut city punch, 2023, French Pavillon, Prague Quadrennial, Ondrej Pribyl

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