

ARTIST TEXTS / Q&A / LINKS
SuperRare : https://superrare.com/francoisvogel
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/francois.vogel/
Twitter : https://twitter.com/vogelfranois1
Web: https://francoisvogel.com
Francois Vogel is a French artist and filmmaker born in 1971 in Meudon.
Francois began scientific studies while practicing drawing, painting and animation. After art studies, he travelled to the pacific to do his military service as a drummer in New Caledonia. Back in Paris he split his time between photography (experimenting pinhole, manufacturing cameras) and video (creating video installations and short films).
His works have received many awards in festivals and have been on many focuses (Clermont-Ferrand, Los Angeles, Dubai, Sofia, Sapporo, Milan, Vendôme and Valence).
In 2015 the exhibition “François Vogel / Les yeux derrière la tête” was dedicated to his work.
Francois Vogel creates short films, video installations, photographs and digital videos. His work is about manipulating the perception of reality, bending our minds with new perspective rules and inviting us to enter into an alternate visual world.
His style could have something to do with surrealism… or be related to geometrical illusions such as Hescher’s art or distortions from André Kertész… it could be the mysterious abstract compositions and poetry of Henri Michaux that influenced him.
At the end of the day, his style is really unique, it shows our everyday life but twisted into an ambiguous and humorous world that feels both well known and unexpected.
Sliding TramView this post on Instagram
A post shared by Francois Vogel (@francois.vogel)
This video loop was shot in Lisboa. It shows a tram simply running on its tracks. But at one point, the tram distorts and enters some kind of digital time and space distortion.
Chat sur fond vert (cat against green background)View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Francois Vogel (@francois.vogel)
A cat slows down in front of a line of green leaves. The line magically expands into a digital abstract space. The cat steps in this portion of space and gets lost in a time and space vortex.
As far as I can remember, I have always been drawing and inventing things. And drawing was a way not only to create images, but also to prepare objects or mechanisms that I wanted to achieve.
I think it was a step by step approach. First of all my generation has grown up with the growth of digital technologies. I started programming computer images with the first french domestic computer (the Thomson TO7 in the early 80th!). Then I learned CGI in art school. I started freelancing in this post-production company Mikros Image that allowed artists to use their big machines for personal creations when not used for production. This is how I did my first real digital short films that went to film festivals.
I would say that my signature style is about distorting reality. I like to play with this empty space between the subject and its projection on the art work. I was doing that in my early photographic experiments when I was folding or twisting the negative inside a pinhole camera. I am doing it again now using digital tools.
There was a pivotal turning point when I decided to quit science studies and go to art school. I was not sure it was the right decision at that time but now I feel so lucky I did it.
A lot of my inspiration comes from random walking. Random walking can free the mind and show stuff at the same time.
I would like to have unlimited time and unlimited finance to see all the creative ideas I have come to life!
It is difficult to say. Sometimes the artists you love won’t make a good match with what you do… or sometimes it is the other way around… there is music that matches your images but you don’t like it! It is amazing when it goes well both ways. That has happened to me a few times in the past and I hope it will happen again… let’s see what comes up!
NFT space is very new to me! It is difficult to tell where all this is leading to. The fact that a digital file can become a single edition is interesting. It is paradoxical but exciting. And if it helps artists to get money from their work, that is a good thing!
NINU NINA :
https://www.ninunina.com/blog/2021/3/15/artist-francois-vogel
Museum Week Magazine :5 questions to the artist and director François Vogel
Beyond photography :
https://www.beyondphotography.online/interviewed-francois-vogel
Liberty Times Net :
https://news.ltn.com.tw/news/life/breakingnews/3151995
Colossal :Artist François Vogel Turns His Unaware Cat into a Wriggling Jellyfish
Beware magazine :
https://www.bewaremag.com/francois-vogel
Artistik Rezo :François Vogel : “j’ai toujours été attiré et fasciné par les choses déformées”