Sophie Varin at Cunst-Link / Saint-Gilles

Sophie Varin
The Mumble The Attractor.

Curated by feeelings

March 2020

Cunst-Link Rue Théodore Verhaegen 154, 
Saint-Gilles, Belgio


Photo: Lola Pertsowski




We meet late in the
afternoon, when the heat becomes bearable. All the blinds inside the bar are
half-shut. There is just one guy sitting at the other end, staring out the
window. He leaves as we enter. We sit in oversized armchairs and order multi
colored cocktails and a strawberry milkshake. A bartender brings us super salty
snacks that we dislike but eat anyway. We look at all the empty armchairs
turning their back to us. A shy breeze makes its way through the moving blinds.
In the distance, the bartender seems to mutter something about us to the cook.
We begin chatting.


feeelings : As you
pointed out to us, mumbling shows one interest for speaking without showing
interest for being understood.The abstract sounds will only transform into
language if the rest of the party manifest their desire to hear. Thus the
conversation will start with others craving for you to speak. You can still be
confused, you can still be uncertain of your thoughts but now you’re desired.
You’ve attracted people into your narration.
Sophie : I see the
mumble as a kind of lure. It triggers the other’s curiosity without fully
taking the responsibility to do so. It is often an oral accident coming from
embarrassment but if you use it purposefully it can also become quite perverse
in a sense. It is the possibility of a combination of the two that attracts me.
One is innocent, naive, and kind of cute, and the other is a manipulative
second thought, but in the end they’re both awkward. But most of all, if you’re
the person ‘receiving’ the mumble, you can’t really know which one of these two
options you’re facing. All you can do is trust your own intuition about it.


feeelings : You made a relation between mumbling as a trap and fly trap in an earlier conversation where you mentioned Fran Betters. He is a fishing aficionado that is known for crafting trout flies -also called attractors if I’m not misunderstood ?- that don’t care to mirror the appearance of a fly (of but rather focus on the ability for the thing, the materials tied together to perform as a fly, reacting to such ways in water for example. A trout fly has the behavioural qualities of a fly as much as mumbling has the behavioural qualities of language and if I’m a trout I’ll be attracted to the fly trap and if I’m a human, strong chance I’ll be lured into the mumble trap.

Sophie : Yes! The mumble trap! Even though it could sound like a form of instinctive pre-language, I like how the mumble can actually be secondary to language in the same way the trout-fishing fly is secondary to the real fly. They’re both mimicking something pre existing.


feeelings : So I don’t want to put too much pressure on them, but I was wondering how the two hosts, the two characters greeting -with mixed feelings- the visitors relate to these ideas of attraction, mumbling and trap?

Sophie : I’m not really sure what the intentions of these two are, and neither do they. I think their position in the space suggests that they know why they are here, that they are in charge. The more you look at them the more unsure they get. They are unbalanced and unsettling. They’re greeting you but want to get the hell out of here at the same time. And if the hosts in charge seem sorry to be so, then the guests can decide to claim full authority. I’m not answering your question sorry.


feeelings : You’ve written a novel, a detective novel, The Best Intentions of JP Gutti and I wanted to ask about the figure of the detective and the importance of intrigue rather than narration itself in your work. There are intrigues : in your paintings we arrive upon something. But we don’t necessarily have to solve them or connect them to a broader story. Same goes as how I perceive the characters, they make me think of characters who don’t get the chance to have names nor stories of their own in movies but embody roles such as the baker or the teacher. In order to facilitate the story to circulate they only show one side of their subjectivity.

Sophie : Yes i think
there is a kind of anonymity in the paintings, and in the characters depicted.
It firstly is to maintain the subject quite generic. Nothing is really situated
in place nor time. But also, as you point out, is it a way to make sure you
will not be trying to solve a specific storyline but rather surrender to an
underlying suspense. There are hints but not enough clues.
And to go back to the
novel, I think i am generally interested in the figure of the detective as this
autonomous character that demands to be trusted without necessarily being
reliable. I really like the idea of a form of trust that can be completely
unjustifiable. I believe artists are somehow asking for the same thing.


Bonus question: What’s your favorite dish or do
you want to share a recipe?
Sophie : I drank so much coffee while writing
this that it killed my usual excitement for food.


We hear a series of
gunshots coming from the forest. The bartender comes to refill our over-salted
snacks. He says it’s too foggy out there tonight, it’s forbidden to hunt.
Apparently quite a few ended up shooting their dog this way.


feeelings : At the
entrance are two characters. They could be spirits who have adorned themselves
with masks to welcome us. Pagan spirits with a frozen face that aim to show us
a simulacrum. It’s a parade or a bait for the one who enters the space. They
are welcoming but disturbing, smiling and grimacing, grotesque and unclear.
It’s as if they set the tone, it’s not believing in them that counts but
creating desirable fictions (by desirable not to see the image smoothly, the
idyllic dream, but rather what underlies, what exists underneath, what carries
fantasies where the moral question has no place).

A bit as if fantasy
would be more embodied than reality itself. This is also what the title of the
exhibition seems to say, The Mumbler attracts from their opaque position.

It’s a kind of daring
seduction position that implies a dissatisfaction with reality and releases a
cascade of what you call ‘hallucinated scrambling’.

And in fact it seems to
me that what you propose is quite exciting, because in this in-between that you
talk about, – and that is everywhere; in the sunsets, in the dawns of your
paintings, in the faces at the entrance, or in the very position of the
curtains/screens – there is something very strong, it is the notion of
ambiguity as a position in itself. Something to hold that is not played out in
the extra-ordinary, authority or self-sufficiency. Do you agree with that?

Sophie: Yes, and
actually you phrased it so well that i don’t know what to add. Apart maybe that
when you think of ambiguity, it is often associated to something on the verge,
a temporary unbalance. On my side, i’m trying to see if there could be a
permanence in ambiguity. Like a serene trust in something presumably
unsettling.


feeelings : And perhaps it also resonates with
the idea of deciding to be seduced?

Sophie : Precisely. I
believe seduction implies a surrender. But it’s an active and alert surrender.
It’s choosing to gain ground and lose some at the same time. And it’s also the
interaction i’m trying to create between the audience and the characters of the
paintings.


feeelings
: It’s remarkable in the sense that I feel that it totally instigates the
viewer to choose to take part in what’s going on in your work. It’s like you’re
betting very hard that absolutely nobody is innocent?
Sophie : I really like
the idea of betting hard. And yes I think that, in a light way, nobody is
innocent. My idea is to manage to create a game between the audience and the
works where they are mutually generating their own guilt. Both are caught and
accusing each other. I also like to work with the idea of threat.
feeelings : This leads
me to another question about the viewer’s/characters’ gaze, which is never
devoid of fantasy. The act of mumbling, which is an action normally dedicated
to language, is as if you had transposed it to the gaze: the fleeting gaze, the
sideways gaze, the gaze of the one who doesn’t want to be seen, who doesn’t
want to be put in a situation of social interaction and who is forced to do so,
the gaze of the animal caught by the headlights of a car! Situations that are
extremely painful to live through but almost invisible on the scale of a body.
Could you talk about
this idea of imperceptible that can cause fractures (as you say about the show:
the excess of gentleness (…) could become threatening).
Is this something you could link to your
practice? Does it resonate with you?
Sophie : I’m going to begin with what you say
about the gaze and the fantasy – more incarnated than reality itself- as you
were saying earlier. I’ve been thinking a lot about situations of desire while
making these works and how desire is able to completely override what is seen.
Brutally, desire 
allows itself all
extrapolations of the real, and painting for me has been the same thing. There
are characters that are kind of blind, heavy color-shadings, bodies crushed to
the ground… like a stupor under high heat. Because of that, the scenes seem
invaded by a kind of fever. A drunkenness – but not necessarily from alcohol-
maybe even a hallucination. Then we understand well it’s not about situating
the depicted storyline but accepting to share the curious and troubled state of
someone that has been observing for too long, or has been dreaming for too
long, or has tried to remember for too long.

I believe, as you say, that I’ve been trying to
transpose a language-mumble to one of the gaze, of emotions and of colors. It’s
kind of the first time that I openly try to convoke emotions. At least I think
that these mute characters, caught, would urgently like to say something.
Embarrassed, they speak without words, maybe with their eyes, and the mumble
here comes as a thing that would like to be shared without being known.