The Past Will Fail You was the US debut of multi-media artist Edward Mills. Born and raised in the United States, Mills has lived in Paris, France for the last two decades. Since 2019, he has exhibited in Paris and elsewhere in France. Working between drawing, painting, and sculpture, his organic style combines a form of surrealist automatism with physically demanding, machine-like outputs.
The exhibition and residency explore the destruction of the self as a necessary part of growth and self-actualization. The public is invited to view the artist at work as he explores space beyond what is familiar for him. This process, on view during the exhibition and residency, involves the artist’s preparation for and real-time dialogue with an interactive sculpture entitled “The Cube” – a conceptual device representing whoever interacts with it. Using the experience of interplay with The Cube throughout the exhibition, the artist collects and codifies discoveries into an original artwork created entirely during the residency. During his residency, there were opportunities to build with Edward and smash The Cube or create giant towers of black or white and dazzling rainbow cityscapes, all with 1000 handmade wooden blocks. Some of the creations can be seen in the photos below. The final, completed artwork was publicly exhibited at the conclusion of the residency along with The Cube through which it was conceived.
EXHIBITION DATES:
CURRENTLY BASED:
ARTIST WEBSITE:
Edward Mills is an American artist living in Paris for the past 19 years. His drawings, paintings and sculptures have been exhibited at Galerie D., and Galerie Belle/Beau, among others.
Mills is an interrogator of the glorious and abject, producing work to reify the frontier between detailed craftsmanship and the unknown – the very place where invention, storytelling and mythology are born – to provide meaning where there is none. His typographic and organic drawing style combines a form of surrealist automatism with physically demanding, machine-like outputs.
Mills creates sculptures simultaneously with his drawings and paintings to help himself and spectators visualize abstraction.
Photo credit: Ben Hassett