Yann Gross – Horizonville


© Yann Gross

Horizonville
Introduction by Pascal Beausse

Exploring by moped, Yann Gross slows down time to develop an ethnographic study of a
group of people living out their dreams. Recreating a world of American culture in a Swiss
valley only makes sense if it entails inventing a new cultural identity that forges a bond
between people in that community. The social component of these practices goes way
beyond leisure to create a new model of everyday life. It is the construction of a collective
fantasy world in reality. As Slavoj Zizek puts it, “Welcome to the desert of the real!”

Here an artificial universe based on imaginary notions from film and television has been
adapted to the everyday reality of a part of Switzerland very far removed from the Rocky
Mountains of the Wild West, but also very far removed from any reality of life in America.

The different events and gatherings that cement the bonds between all these people who
gird themselves with symbols of the American Dream lend it the force of reality.
It is certainly less about recreating a piece of America in part of the Rhône Valley than
about creating a new culture, new practices and identities, fusing Swiss realities with the
imaginary American Way of Life à la Hollywood.

Yann Gross does not attempt to explain this singular sociocultural phenomenon, much less
judge or even mock it. He takes a highly empathetic, humanly intelligent approach. Like the
character in David Lynch’s film The Straight Story who travels across the vast spaces of
America by mini tractor, he slows the pace of his perception in exploring the valley by
moped, towing a trailer that allows him to camp wherever he sets up his tripod.

This patient and genuinely curious approach means that he is accepted by the people who
are the subject of his photographic investigation. The trust he elicits enables him to
develop several different complementary modes of representation, from posed portraits to
snapshots of the rites and festivals where the tribe assembles.

Landscape photographs revealing the architectural impact of this dissemination of the
American Dream along the roadside against the backdrop of the Alps reinforce the calm
strangeness of this mingling of two worlds.

Yann Gross’s story is about people at the beginning of the twenty-first century. In the wake
of globalization, thanks to contact facilitated by high-tech communication between far-flung
cultures, human communities are inventing new identities and practices that help create a
cheerful patchwork of creolization.

Enjoy the exhibition Horizonville by Yann Gross!

16 comments

  1. I take my hat off! wonderful!

  2. You havent seen the prints yet, Stefan;) Mind blowing!

    Great compliment for showing this amazing portrait of a part of switzerland, Yann! Thank you.

  3. I remember having seen these pictures some time ago, nevertheless I’m happy to see them again.

  4. what a weird culture to copy, middle america, but healthier :) sort of red-neck lite!

  5. Where can i see these prints! I will travel.

    When i was at image 12 i started thinking… Nice, there’s still so many images left!!!

    I started thinking Soth at the beginning of the set, but by the end it was more like a real-world Crewdson!

    Applause to you Yan and Thank you to Still-dancing for making this available via such a clean presentation platform.

  6. Superb work! Also Yann Gross’s website is a delight to visit.
    Very good story ideas and execution.

    Is this work all in large format?

  7. (looks like it given the perspective correction)

  8. Great work! Probably great to see the prints to, also makes me want to visit this place…

  9. Saw his works online a few weeks ago Stunning. It must be really a pleasure to see the prints.

  10. Dietmar, i tried to pry a trip there and back between the Nov 30 and Dec 19th but i just couldn’t make it fit! Too bad really, i think seeing the exhibit and catching up with you would have been a double treat! Another time when i’ve got more than weeks notice :-) What a short exhibit!

  11. Very solid body of work. beautiful portraits

  12. switzerland just became worldchampion in football (u-17) and now it seems we also have a new worldchampion in photography…

    i’m blown away by this photographic treasure !

    oh shit, i just saw he’s french… ;-)

  13. His work really reminds of “On the Road with Charles Kuralt” the CBS News series when I was a kid. Good stuff!