Sylvia Bossu was a French conceptual artist. After exhibiting her works in Paris, Antwerp, Vienna, Munich or Berlin in the early 1990s, Bossu died prematurely in a car accident in 1995, aged 33.
Bossu had her first solo exhibition in October 1987. In January–February 1988 she presented the workAlimentation T 2 and, in November–December, Miroir de courtoisie 1. Bossu then worked in Sète, south of France, in 1989 and in 1990.' In 1991–1992, Bossu went back to Paris and was the artist in residence at the studios of the American Center in the Cité des Arts, where she met American artist Claudia Hart.' In the early 1990s, Bossu exhibited her works in Paris, Antwerp, Vienna, Munich or Berlin.' In 1993 she moved to Berlin, where she lived with Hart, and frequently travelled between Paris, Berlin, Antwerp and Vienna. In August 1994 she moved to Paris to live with Éric Colliard.' Bossu died in a car accident in Chamousset, Savoie, on 15 July 1995, aged 33, while heading to the Festival d'Avignon. In 2006 she was posthumously awarded the Prix Évelyne Encelot Femmes & Art.
Works
Bossu belongs to a movement that art critic Nicolas Bourriaud has called the esthétique du relationnel. In the magazine art press, Claudia Hart described Bossu's works as an existential search for the "raw, naked expression of human pain", breaking with the approach of "her master Marcel Duchamp." Bossu animated her ready-mades, Hart follows, "by borrowing her machines from the everyday world – a sewing machine or a bathroom scale – and placing them in tautological arrangements that became metaphors of alienation, separation or death." In Miroir de courtoisie 1 the spectator is invited to stand up in front of a mirror in order to look at their reflection. As the spectator walks towards the mirror, however, a photo-electric cell triggers the flash of a camera that saturates the mirror. The spectator, dazzled, is unable to see their reflection. In Films cousus the projector produces the sound of a sewing machine as a film is projected, giving the impression that the projector is sewing the film in front of the spectator. In La mangeuse d'images the spectator is invited to see his personal films one last time, then destroy them by offering them to a shredder. Au moment voulu takes the form of a meat grinder connected to a scale, so that the grinder cuts raw meat when a person steps on the scale. The title is inspired by Maurice Blanchot's novel Au moment voulu, where the narrator describes a situation in which he feels the existence of a will that goes beyond him and encompasses him.