Galerie Jacques Cerami Route de Philippeville 346 6010 Couillet Charleroi Belgique
Johan Muyle lives and works in Liege (Belgium) and in Valenciennes (France) is one of the most active Belgian artists on the international scene. He is known equally well for his assemblages made from heterogeneous objects and for his large-scale installations. Evoking ironic situations and referencing popular expressions, the latter frequently employ derisive humor as a means of coming to grips with complex social and political issues.
Composed of diverse elements, Muyle’s works frequently include movement, sound and/or light, elements which at first sight make the pieces seem carnivalesque. The tangible components generally consist of found objects, flea market finds, and paintings executed by others. For instance, Muyle’s commissioned the Cine Banners Painters in Madras, India, creators of billboard portraits advertising popular movies, to execute large-scale paintings from images he provided. Muyle followed their work closely before incorporating it into his own kinetic installations.
Johan Muyle’s art is imbued with humanist values--most notably, respect for the Other. Without proposing solutions, he questions the world and induces his audience to reflect upon the issues raised in his work. For instance, Muyle treats the subject of human differences in such a way as to evoke the notion of coexistence rather than of opposition. For him, mixed-race and cross-cultural identities are emphatically positive attributes, and it is this complementarity of differences (sociological, cultural, religious, philosophical, etc.) to which his work alludes. Juxtaposing contradictory ideas which complete rather than oppose one another, and consistently privileging inquiry over assertion, Muyle presents a participatory, ethical and poetic view of alterity.