Ones to Watch 2019: Raphaël Barontini

Each year, British Journal of Photography presents its Ones To Watch – a selection of 19 emerging image-makers, chosen from a list of nearly 750 nominations. Collectively, they provide a window into where photography is heading, at least in the eyes of the curators, editors, agents, festival producers and photographers we invited to nominate. Every weekend throughout May, BJP-online is sharing profiles of the 19 photographers, originally published in the magazine. Discover more here.

The title of his 2018 solo exhibition in Istanbul, Tapestry from an Asteroid, evokes the breadth of influences and otherworldly quality of French artist Raphaël Barontini’s work. His assemblages combine icons of classical painting with photographic fragments, silkscreened images with digital printing, and monochrome images with bold splashes of colour, all of which is layered onto owing textiles. The images he creates in this way draw as much from the canon of art history as they do from a hallucinatory, fantasised and poetic future.

While Barontini is not primarily a photographer, his works always integrate photographic elements. “Photography is a constant and indispensable part of my work,” he explains. Each piece begins with a digital collage of images from multiple sources, whether these images come from his own archive – photographs of classical works of art taken on his frequent visits to museum collections, or formal compositions observed on the street – or are found online. These images are then silkscreened onto his chosen support in order to “include both photography and the materiality of painting” in the work.

“While I attach a great deal of importance to the fixed frame of classical painting,” he explains, “I have always been interested in creating works on textile materials that are outside that realm.” Flags, banners, pennants, curtains, tapestries – Barontini makes constant use of textiles to give his work a more fluid quality and to allow him to explore the possibilities of spatial installation.

© Raphaël Barontini

His compositions are portraits of a kind, although not of a single, specific individual. Instead he describes himself as “the portraitist of a poetic, fantasised reality”. He compares his approach to portraiture to that of a collagist, citing the Dadaist Hannah Höch or African-American collagist Romare Bearden as in uences.

In describing his practice, Barontini often uses the term ‘creolisation’ associated with writers and thinkers of the French Caribbean (where Barontini has roots), such as Édouard Glissant and Aimé Césaire. The term, which refers to the multiplicity and hybrid nature of identity, is well-chosen as it encapsulates his multilayered approach based on manifold influences, and also on the subject matter of his work, which includes classical iconography, colonial history and the visual culture of the French Caribbean.

On first seeing Barontini’s work, Peggy Sue Amison, the artistic director of East Wing in Dubai, describes being awestruck by “how he effortlessly mixes art history and modern technologies in order to present us with an exciting new visual language – a cut-and-paste mix of global histories and textures that reflects on the glitches of modern civilisation.”

raphaelbarontini.com

Discover more Ones to Watch photographers here.This article was originally published in issue #7884 of British Journal of Photography. Visit the BJP Shop to purchase the magazine.

© Raphaël Barontini
© Raphaël Barontini
© Raphaël Barontini