Numeridanse est disponible en français.
Souhaitez-vous changer de langue ?

Born in Paris in 1984, Théo Mercier is a French  sculptor and stage director who lives and works between Paris and  Marseille (France). Claiming formal freedom, Théo Mercier sets out to  deconstruct the mechanisms of history, objects and representations, in  which he recreates harmonious contradictions. By turns explorer,  collector and artist, his work is at the crossroads of anthropology,  geopolitics, tourism and landscape. Resident at Villa Medici in 2013 and  nominated for the Marcel-Duchamp prize in 2014, Théo Mercier has also  won the Silver Lion at the 2019 Venice Biennale for Dance with Steven  Michel, as well as the Jury Prize for the French Pavilion at the Prague  Quadrennial in 2023 with Céline Peychet. In 2022, he was awarded  Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres by the French Ministry of Culture. He  has had major solo exhibitions at the Villa Medici (Roma), the  Conciergerie de Paris, the Fondation Luma Westbau (Zurich), the  Collection Lambert (Avignon), the Museo El Eco (Mexico), the Habana  Biennial (Cuba), the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature (Paris), the  [mac] Musée d’art contemporain (Marseille), the Lieu Unique (Nantes) and  the Tri Postal (Lille). His work has also been shown in numerous group  shows, including at the Centre Pompidou (Paris, Shanghai), the Hamburger  Banhof (Berlin), the Palacio Bellas Artes (Mexico) and Arts Jameel  (Dubai). Shifting from the “white cube” to the “black box”, Mercier is  also a stage director. His performances have been shown at  Nanterre-Amandiers, the Festival d’Automne, the Ménagerie de verre and  the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the Festival d’Avignon, Theater Spektakel  (Zurich), Vidy (Lausanne), La Bâtie (Geneva), Usine C (Montreal), The  Invisible dog Art Center (New York), the Festival Actoral (Marseille),  the Vooroit Art Center (Ghent) or the Short Theater (Rome), among  others.

Théo Mercier is represented by galerie mor charpentier (Paris,  Bogota), and is Associate Artist at the Théâtre National de Bretagne  (Rennes).

Source : theomercier.com

Add to the playlist