Fabien Lédé: "Scenography should be the viewer's companion to an alternative world"
The work of contemporary visual artist Fabien Lédé is vivid and memorable. His artistic installations and sets for theatre performances shine with bright neon lights, unfold alongside green vegetation, tell stories through videos broadcast on wide diagonal screens, or are embodied in the details of architectural objects. Speaking about himself, Lédé says that the art objects he creates are like living forms that can act independently or even change their appearance.
What was the beginning of your journey as a set designer and visual artist?
I became interested in visual art at the age of five. I used to draw snail shells and try to sell them to the neighbours. I remember I sold one of them, but probably only because they were people I knew. But I realised that this is what I want to do - to create beautiful and not always useful objects that nobody but me wants to see or have. Meanwhile, my career as a scenographer started much later, when I moved from France to Poland.
What is the most interesting thing for you in these two areas?
Everything, absolutely everything is possible. Even ideas that I may never be able to realise are exciting to me. Creating art for its own sake, trying to do everything on my own, pushing my limits by inventing new methods, or even the inevitability of making mistakes - that's what gives me the most satisfaction.
How much space and opportunity do you have to realise your ideas in the field of stage design? Because in theatre you are in a way also dependent on the director and the concept of the play.
I have enough space and opportunities to work on my personal creations, but of course, in stage design, your work depends on the theme, the book or the film on which the play is based. It can also depend on another artist's work and the overall theme if you are exhibiting your set design.
How would you describe your creative style and the aesthetics you create?
A few years ago, I would have said that I make pure, slightly naive art based on stylised folklore, natural colour or emotional imagery. Nowadays I create disruptive architectural objects for a natural and changing space. I feel that I am becoming more and more like a gardener for endangered landscapes, a collector of plants or stones that are no longer in their natural habitat.
Are innovative methods important to you? How do you combine traditional forms of artistic expression with handmade art and the latest technologies in your work?
I'm not looking for ways to apply innovation in art, but I am curious and I like to observe, to look at lots of images, videos, and to be interested in everyday events. I like new forms and ways of making art in new ways. This allows me to progress in my personal creativity. I create everything with my own hands, handmade is important to me, so it could probably be described as traditional expression. But at the same time I feel the need to eliminate the material from my work, to become lighter, to lose the weight of physical art... and all this is in order to slowly move towards the virtual with the help of the latest technologies.
What is the place of sound and video in your work?
Properly selected and coordinated lights are one of the key elements in the realisation of my creative ideas. If, say, the lighting is bad, the installation will immediately lose about fifty percent of its strength as a work of art. That's why I always try to direct the light directly onto the set itself. This principle helps to ensure that the light will do its job of highlighting the objects, their shapes and details. I also think that direct lighting is most suitable for theatrical scenery. It becomes closer to the everyday environment.
Video is different. I like media and I like to use it in my installations. That way they become multi-layered and multi-dimensional. But I have to admit, though, that using different media in your set design can be limiting for you as an artist. Of course, video can be presented in many different ways, from transparent screens, to incorporating it into other objects, to placing it in space… I did something similar when designing the set for Łukasz Twarkowski's performance "Lokis", where we gave the screen a secondary function of a lightbox, but the screen itself still did not lose its true purpose of showing video… However, video allows me to highlight certain details or accents that are not always visible to the viewer's eye in the scenography.
What was the experience of creating the sets for the plays "Lokis" by Ł. Twarkowski at the Lithuanian National Drama Theatre and "Es war einmal... das Leben", which was staged not so long ago at the Hannover Theatre in Germany?
It's like a long journey through darkness. The two performances complement and extend each other. They are like a never-ending night in which every human being returns to his or her own primitiveness, when our inner beastliness begins to control us. As I worked on these performances, my set became darker and darker, closer to the underground, hidden, waiting for a new day that might never come. So it's quite a challenge every time to create a set that can just disappear into a dark space or become an organic part of nature.
I can reveal that "Lokis" and "Es war einmal... das Leben" are a kind of hint to the upcoming production "Respublika" by Twarkowski, which will be staged in Lithuania later. The action will take place in an open space and the scenography will be integrated into the natural environment. In the end, it will all develop into a rave party.
Creating mystical and highly impactful spaces. How important is it for you to provoke an emotional and perhaps even physical reaction in the viewer? Could you call your scenography an alternative reality?
Although I create scenography and installations, I feel like a performance artist. I compare my works to living forms that can act, move, change colours or change their nature. I think that art installations or the same scenography should be the viewer's companion to an alternative world, something that exists but is very deeply hidden or completely camouflaged under a thick layer of the evils that the world throws at us on a daily basis... My task is therefore to help the viewer to become part of this "luxurious" world of imagination.
What is your opinion on image manipulation? Do you use it?
The creation of each image is in itself a manipulation. However, I don't want to create lies or deceive the viewer. I am in favour of the viewer discovering hidden things for himself, to understand my works as objects with no meaning.
What do you see as the future and transformation of visual art? What would you like to see, or perhaps imagine?
It is hard to imagine. The development of creative media gives us the opportunity to create and show imagery. I see the future as a big, messy patchwork of different images and a mix, reminiscent of remixes of 90s music hits.
As far as my work is concerned, I see its future in very concrete terms. I plan to stop creating objects and images of non-existent forms and to focus on elements that exist in reality. One of my dreams is to establish a palm plantation in Burgundy. The rapid climate change shows that the world will not be the same again. I want to turn an unexotic place into a tropical… Replace wine production with coconut water production.
Photo: F. Lédé archive
Published: swo.lt










