
Martine Bedin
La part des choses

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.
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Verre super-marché et caraffe cristal, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Verre super-marché et caraffe cristal, 2025, detail

Plat à gratin et porcelaine japonaise, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Plat à gratin et porcelaine japonaise, 2025, detail

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.

À peu de choses près, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.

Tasse polonaise et passoire, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Tasse polonaise et passoire, 2025, detail

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.

Bols marocains sur balcon, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Plat à gratin et porcelaine à mignardises, 2025, watercolor on linen paper mounted on canvas, 70 × 96 cm

Plat à gratin et porcelaine à mignardises, 2025, detail

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.

citrons nocturnes, 2025, oil on wood, 79,2 × 63 × 32 cm

citrons nocturnes, 2025

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.

après dîner, 2025, oil on wood, 79,2 × 63 × 32 cm

Exhibition view, La part des choses, 2025, Crèvecœur, Paris. Courtesy of the artist and Crèvecœur, Paris.
Even the cat believes it. Such was the title of the first work in this series of watercolours on
natural linen paper, before the exhibition titled "La part des choses" presented the continuation. A trompe-l’oeil even for a cat? It is known that a cat’s field of vision can reach 260 degrees, giving it a panoramic view of its environment.
At 7 rue de Beaune: six paintings. A long, detailed shot of the objects on the artist’s table.
The watercolour captures things with no possible way back. Porcelain bowls from Japan, a
traditional coffee cup from Warsaw, a cup picked up on rue du Jacob, a mass-distribution
dishrack. There is something of a self-portrait in this depiction of rather disparate items of
crockery. Objects stocked at the back of a cupboard and which only come to life when needed. A life spent partly in the shadows and partly in light. In part silent and in part shrill.
The object slowly takes shape on a plain surface, and its shadow turns just like the time
being given on a sundial. Each hour is exact. Each shadow unveils a little of the object’s
truth. But the more this truth is unveiled, the more an object, which can be quite familiar, seems to be part of a different reality.
At 5 rue de Beaune: two standing mirrors, which painted parts can be rotated entirely, echo
the rotation/revolution of shadows in the paintings. These are also “reflections of objects placed on the table, in front, at night, with no or almost no shadows, shadows of an American
night, nocturnal, artificial lighting, with a lemon-yellow blaze,” writes the artist. These objects/paintings evoke pell-mell Spanish still-lifes, Renaissance vanitas globes, astrolabes
from ancient collections, the velvet of Visconti films, fairytales, images that stay in the
mind with the authority of memories.
Martine Bedin has been drawing objects ever since she started out as a designer with
Memphis - objects to change the world, objects “which, like viruses, infiltrated neat bourgeois interiors, to make the domestic order sicken.”* Objects still fascinate her. But, found in everyday life, already there, scrutinised by the artist who tips them into another dimension.
Another animal then comes to mind, after a cat playing with its shadow and that of other
things – which we like to think it takes for real objects. An octopus. According to Vinciane
Despret in Autobiographie d’un poulpe et autres récits d’anticipation, for octopuses the projection of ink, long interpreted as a screen to blur the vision of its adversaries, is in fact analogous to an image, allowing them to produce an appearance of themselves, like a shadow.
"Faire la part des choses" or “making allowances”, means finding the happy medium between
two situations, or two divergent opinions… Martine Bedin here offers a voyage between a
reality and a fiction offering a projected shadow or an anamorphic reflection.