On this episode, Caren Sullivan talks to artist Liliane Puthod in 2021.
Liliane Puthod's practice often takes the form of large-scale installations and sculptures using both handmade and industrial materials as a way to confront archaeological and commodified times.
She appropriates and manipulates some of society’s existing modes of dissemination, display and production to subtly destabilize what she considers the fabrication of desire and subjectivity in relation to objecthood. Investigating the temporality of everyday life’s consumption, her work questions its perceived value within our globalised world.
Liliane Puthod, born in France lives and works in Dublin. She graduated from a Master in Fine Arts at HEAD Geneva in 2013.
Selected exhibitions include: Longest Way Round Shortest Way Home exhibited at the Dublin Port, Temple Bar Gallery+Studios, Dissolving Histories: An Unreliable Presence, Golden Thread Gallery, curated by Mary Cremin and Peter Richards (2020); Display, Link and Cure, The Complex, curated by Paul McGrane and Mark O’Gorman (2019); How Long After Best Before, Pallas Projects/Studios (2019); Everything Must Go, PS2, Belfast (2019); Awards include; Arts Council of Ireland Visual Arts Bursary (2019); Summer Studio Residency, TUD, Dublin (2019); Fonds Cantonal d’Art Contemporain (FCAC) Geneva (2015); Fire Station Sculpture Workshop Award (2014).
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For more information, follow Lilliane Puthod on Instagram @lilianeputhod @templebargalleryandstudios
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