Marie Cloquet presents a cohesive body of work that unfolds from a single overarching theme:
ultraviolence. This visual response to violence and vulnerability examines how we relate to horror,
powerlessness, and the need for protection in a world that continuously produces and consumes
images of conflict.
Cloquet works with existing visual material depicting war, invasions, and bombardments, sourced
from news and media reports. These confronting testimonies of our time are translated into
layered silkscreen prints, in which painted fragments and interventions partially obscure and
restructure the original imagery. What emerges is a new, seemingly coherent whole that raises
questions about fabrication, truth, and perception, and about the ways in which violence is
graphically shaped and commodified. The title Ultraviolence explicitly references both pop culture
and the gaming world, where brutality is aestheticized, and shock becomes a marketable product.
Set against this harsh, distanced gaze, Cloquet introduces a more intimate register. In hushed
compositions, she weaves together hand-coloured collages and analogue studio photographs of
everyday yet charged objects: soaps from the Arab world made from olive oil, and textile motifs
from her family home. When Aleppo was bombed, she instinctively reached for the last remaining
pieces of Aleppo soap she owned. A small, deeply personal gesture born of helplessness. Satellite
images of bombardments are brought together with a bedspread from the guest room of her
grandparents and the curtains from her childhood bedroom, fabrics that were lovingly preserved
for years. Graphic textiles, with their associations of domesticity, pyjamas, and a space of comfort
and care, stand in stark contrast to the violence of nocturnal bombings.
Collecting blankets and clothes is often an initial reflex in attempts to help. The all-too-familiar
images of refugee camps, where once carefully chosen colours and patterns are transformed into
barely sufficient functionality as tents, shelter, and covering, link this new body of work to
Cloquet’s earlier Nouadhibou series. The collateral damage of capitalism creates the world’s
dumping grounds as places of last resort. Images of conflict, of children orphaned amid rubble,
waste, and destruction, are overwhelming and hard to bear, yet equally unbearable to look away
from. The materials function as tangible forms of shelter and softening, set against a brutal reality.
Together, these works articulate the tension between world and home, between collective
trauma and personal memory. They reveal how we navigate between confrontation and
withdrawal, between looking and protecting. Cloquet’s oeuvre testifies to the need for both
reflection and care and underscores the enduring power of images, not only to expose the
senselessness of violence presented as a condition of our safety, but also to create space for
healing and consolation in times of unrest.
Artists: MARIE CLOQUET