One of the two box sets of the HYPER TROPHY project.
HYPER TROPHY consists of 12 series of 28 photographs depicting France's vernacular landscape. Through a variety of subjects – such as Chinese restaurants, recycled gas stations, skate parks and other sundry buildings – HYPER TROPHY aims at mapping France's urban margins while steering clear of hackneyed pictures. With 336 photographs taken over the past 6 years within a 250 km radius from Paris, this archive-like book explores the mutating fringes of France's regions: urban development areas, roads, the outskirts of towns – places people usually drive through, buildings whose unassuming air could serve as a common thread here.
Through its accumulation process as well as its choice of subjects, HYPER TROPHY generates a sort of “hyper-banality”. It is a matter-of-fact but dreamlike testimony, drawing from documentary films and road movies, realism and Sim City. An ambiguous object, theatrically objective, distanced and melancholy, chaotic and organized, complex and obvious, HYPER TROPHY is, in a nutshell, as Yann Rondeau insightfully puts it with one of his trademark contradictions in terms, “du Becher Pop”.
Eric Tabuchi is an artist of Danish and Japanese origins; he examines his country of adoption in order to portray it, and in some way make it his own.
500 copies limited edition.
See also the second box set (gathering vol. 7 to 12): TROPHY (also available in a limited edition gathering the two box sets with 6 original photographs numbered and signed by the artist).
French artist-photographer of Danish-Japanese origin, Eric Tabuchi (born 1959) questions contemporary industrial culture through the signs that mark its landscape and determine its language.