Reclaiming a space through an exhibition
Occupying the second floor of the Pompidou, inside what was once a library dedicated to public information, Tillmans reshapes architecture into a terrain of tension. The cavernous, angular space carries the weight of both history and urgent present. Here, silence once ruled; now, images and sounds clash and echo in uneasy harmony. The exhibition spreads out like an assault on the senses, tracking more than forty years of work from the German artist whose lens has never been neutral. Tillmans pulls from political upheavals, cultural shifts and social fractures, weaving a tangled web that refuses to settle. Tillmans treats the space not as a neutral container but as a participant, activating its silent histories through site-specific works and inviting visitors to traverse its spaces with eyes wide open, senses sharp, and assumptions dismantled.Throughout the exhibition, Tillmans refuses easy narratives or closure. His images loop and spiral, caught in cycles of political urgency and personal memory, environmental dread and social critique. He invites viewers to live in the tension between despair and defiance, to confront the fractures that define contemporary existence without seeking false consolation. His work does not comfort — it disrupts, unsettles and challenges. It holds up a fractured mirror to a world unraveling, insisting on the necessity of engagement, awareness, and resistance.
Confronting Violence: The State We’re In
From the moment you enter, the work confronts you with the relentless weight of the recent past — wars, displacements, and political fractures bleeding into the present. This opening section, History Now, hurls you into a relentless visual field where conflict unfolds in jagged layers. Tillmans appropriates fragments of global violence, collaging images that include the heavy boots of soldiers marching through Moscow streets, migrants caught in the liminal space of the US-Mexico border and screen grabs from social media, news clippings and digital fragments. This dense mesh of visuals assaults the viewer’s perception, laying bare the construction of public consciousness around conflict and crisis. Tillmans strips away any veneer of detachment, forcing a reckoning with the mechanisms that shape our understanding of global suffering. Here, photography becomes a battleground for truth, propaganda, and the fragile hope of empathy.
The Ocean’s Quiet Rage
The pace shifts in the second section, The State We’re In, where Tillmans turns his gaze toward the elemental and the abstract. Here, the restless sea becomes a metaphor for the fragile condition of both humanity and the environment. The waves are not peaceful; they pulse with tension, reflecting a world caught between flow and fracture, motion and stasis. Through blurred, shifting images of water, Tillmans captures a silent rage — the slow violence of climate change and ecological collapse reverberating beneath the surface of everyday life. This watery expanse draws connections between the shifting tides of human existence and the fragile conditions sustaining life on the planet. The ocean here is not merely a backdrop but an active, fluid force, mirroring uncertainty and vulnerability. It is a quiet scream in the storm, inviting reflection on the deep currents shaping our present and future.