HeHe
About

HeHe is an artist duo consisting of Helen Evans (French, British) and Heiko Hansen (German) based in Le Havre, France. Their art works are about the social, industrial and ecological paradoxes found in today’s technological landscapes. Crossing different disciplines, their practice explores the relationship between art, media and environment.

Their ongoing research project about air pollution over the last 20 years and its representation in visual culture let to their ambitious public art project Nuage Vert situated on power plants in Helsinki and Paris. Nage Vert and other projects from this research are documented in their extensive book publication Man Made Clouds. Man Made Clouds is dedicated to the anthropocentric clouds. In our imagination their countless forms and combinations offer infinite possibilities for metaphor. In visual culture, far from being neutral, representations of clouds embody ideology. HeHe’s series of atmospheric dioramas refer to these anthropocentric atmopheres (Chams d’Ozone, Fleur de Lys, Planète Laboratoire, Absynth), they are three-dimensional dynamic cinematic devices, scientific laboratory landscape machines. These hybrid landscapes are post-Eidophusikons, connecting with the primary depictions of thermodynamic pollution in art history (Philip James de Loutherbourg, J. M. W. Turner, Claude Monet) and stage todays polluted climate as immersive environments. The artists chromatic coding of landscapes mixes digital and real world experiences, physical environment with numeric representation (Champs d’Ozone, Rodune, Radiant Tree, Fleur de Lys, Planète Laboratoire). The eerie presence of HeHe’s “Industrial Green” in their artworks situates this colour on a fine line between color perception, technological progress and ecological imagination. “Positive, life-affirming, healthy, natural and ecological the industrial green has also dystopian side effects: Clinical green, green deserts, algae bloom, nuclear green afterglow, cathode rays, green fluorescent proteins, ectoplasm, kryptonite. The glow-in-the-dark green is the colourwhich is nourishing the myths of the anthropocene. Our greenwashed consciousness is manipulated by the mighty attribute of the ‘ultra green’wavelength. Our positive reception of this particular spectral range allows the laboratory vista to become a technological landscape. At the same time the industrial green is a tracing dye, marking the territory of a new polluted age.” (Jens Hauser)

The actors of HeHe’s performance installations are the machines themselves: trains, cars, oil rigs, power plants, incinerators, cranes, and the electric devices of mass consumption. Installed in real world environments or staged infrastructures, the machine becomes a theatrical device. Using humour, romance and ingenuity, their work opens alternative readings to the narrative of ecology versus industry. Their Train Project series is an example of their concept of “reverse cultural engineering”. Referring to the “industrialized consciousness” as Wolfgang Schivelbusch denotes it in his book The Railway Journey, the Train Project is a speculation into the language and aesthetics of transportation. Situated in many emblematic railway locations, active or abandoned, HeHe proposes transport systems which function in the moment of operation. The performances generate an ongoing scenography that engages in questions about the reality and “real fiction” of travel. As an inverse of the book “Aramis, or the Love of Technology”, by Bruno Latour the Train Project projects the “machine ensemble” onto speculative alternative future.

HeHe have installed large-scale works in public space. Site-specific commissions include: Public Works (Ondernemersfonds Utrecht), Bruges Triennial, Maison des Arts Georges Pompidou (Cajarc, Lot), Casino Forum d’art contemporain (Luxembourg), Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb, Nuit Blanche Paris, Le Voyage à Nantes, FACT (Liverpool) & The Arts Catalyst (London), SKOR (Amsterdam), The Lovelock Art Commission/Cape Farewell in collaboration with MOSI (Manchester), Invisible Dust (London), Centre Georges Pompidou Paris, European Capital of Culture (Luxembourg & Grand Région).

Their monumental project Nuage Vert, which beamed a laser light onto the cloud released by a power plant, won a Golden Nica in Hybrid art at Arts Electronica (2008). Further international prizes include an Honorary Mention at Arts Electronica (2011), the Environmental Art Fund in Finland (2008), Prix Green Zero1 San José (2008) and Cynet Art prize Dresden (2001).

Bridging between media arts, design and contemporary art, HeHe have exhibited in many cultural institutions internationally including the Centre Pompidou, Royal Academy London, Palais de Beaux-Arts (Bruxelles), Parc D’Arte Viventi (Turin), MAXXI (Rome), National Art Museum of China (Beijing), Biennale de Lyon, San José Museum of Art, Biennale Internationale Design (St Etienne). Their work has been aquired by public collections (Fonds municipal d’art contemporain de la Ville de Paris, FRAC Alsace) and private collectors.

HeHe is represented by the gallery Aeroplastics Contemporary in Bruxelles. Both Helen and Heiko are teaching at the École Supérieur d’Art et Design du Havre where they initiated and are responsible for the Master unit Art Media Environment.

Contact

Helen Evans and Heiko Hansen 76600 Le Havre, France contact(at)hehe.org

Fleur de Lys, 2009

Fleur de Lys is composed of a realistic model of an industrial facility contained within a glass water tank which simulates a nuclear meltdown. Beneath the tank are an array of technical apparatus, tubes, pumps and machinery which are used to recreate the lighting and special effects inside the tank. It is a choreographed scene, with three actors: cooling tower, mushroom cloud and the atmosphere hanging above the landscape. It suggests a machine for studying the worst case scenario whose existence is never made public - a scientific laboratory machine for testing postulated accidents. A sound score accompanies the miniature aquatic spectacle and every twenty minutes the emission resembles an atomic mushroom cloud, slowly rising above the power plant.

The idea of the submerged cooling tower brings to mind the tragedy of Fukushima (2011) and references the profusion of images in recent years which have depicted the impending disasters of global warming; where our cities most famous monuments are flooded or submerged under rising seawater. In the ensuing climate change debate and energy crisis, nuclear power attempts to re-emerge, from the dust clouds of Chernobyl (1986) and the tragedy of Fukushima (2011), as a viable ‘green’ alternative to fossil fuels. The ironic title refers to the Lily flower. Its stylised form has been a symbol of the French monarchy whose shape is similar to the atomic mushroom - a reference to the energy politics of France. The purity of the lily, also part of the heraldry of the Virgin Mary, is echoed in the rhetoric of pro-nuclear discourse.

Sound: Raphael Seguin Image credit: Laurence Godart, Franz Wamhof, Marc Paeps / HeHe Produced with the support of the Edith-Russ-Haus for Media Art stipend programme, Oldenburg. Courtesy Aeroplastics Contemporary Scientific advice: Jean-Marc Chomaz and Antoine Garcia, Laboratoire d’Hydrodynamique de l’Ecole polytechnique