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For the past dozen years, Renaud Auguste-Dormeuil has
been investigating manifestations of the desire for
security in the public spaces of developed societies.
Often adopting a documentary format or pastiching a
guided tour, his works show how, increasingly, the exercise
of freedom in democratic societies is being subtly demarcated
by protection and surveillance technologies. He has
created a guided tour of the surveillance systems of
the Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de
Paris, revealed the discreet but omnipresent video surveillance
cameras along the routes of demonstrations in the French
capital, and produced a video map of the most well situated
sidewalk cafés from which to direct potential
terrorist attacks in major European cities. Auguste-Dormeuil’s
art not only renders visible the multiple forms of fear
and the need for control that haunt our contemporary
nature, but also uncovers the degree to which they afford
a decoding of the economic stakes undergirding that
nature. For Mobile Space, he will explore how
security requirements delineate subtle tensions in the
urban fabric of downtown Montréal.
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