Séparation
Séparation is one of a series of photographs taken in rue Lemercier in Paris, where Abdessemed lived. He exploited the public sphere as a site of encounters with the unexpected. In one photo, wild boar roam among the cars (Sept frères, 2006), in another human beings stroll with skele- tons (Saturday, 2008), and in this one Abdessemed approaches a lion. The street became a site of creativity and productive energy in a way that prompted Abdessemed to refer to it as his “studio.”
In Séparation, the wild animal in the heart of the urban context embodies the radical, irreducible otherness of nature. A lion is impossible to control, dizzyingly outsized and full of immanent violence. Watched by a professional lion tamer, Abdessemed approaches the beast, entering its space. The photograph records the moment of this convergence, which represents no specific act but only a gesture charged with tension and potential, indicating an irreducible “separation” and extravagance. The face of the man in the background—that of the tamer observing the event— displays the attention of a spectator of a simultaneously fascinating and frightening occurrence. The presence of a wild beast in the city also evokes strange parallels between human history and natural history, between forms of life in human communities and the ineluctable, cruel laws of “nature.” AM