Overview

Val (Valerie Goutard) was born in France in May 1967.  She spent her childhood and early teenage years in Africa. From there she lived in Europe and South America returning to France after gaining her higher education in Venezuela. Val was strongly influenced by her time abroad and identified with humanism rather than as a citizen belonging to any country. For ten years, her marketing career took her to London, Madrid, and eventually back to Paris. In 2002 a sculptor friend would introduce her to a more creative and alternative path. Val’s initial interaction with sculpture had ignited something deep within, and would eventually be her calling to an inner passion that once arisen, would never be diminished. 

 

Independent. Instinctive. Intuitive. As a self-taught artist, her freedom from the shackles of academic and technical knowledge only propelled her further, as if formal knowledge would have been a brake and would have hindered her from excelling. Val took a leap of faith in 2004 and moved from homeland in France to Thailand, where she set up her studio in Bangkok, the bustling Asian megalopolis where everything seemed possible. It was also here where she met who would become her husband. In her own words, it was the combination of the great freedom offered by Asia, the welcoming community, and discovering her soul mate, that helped her artworks gain critical acclaim within a short space of time. From Asia to Europe, her artworks were highly-lauded and praised by thousands of enthusiasts and art collectors alike. 

 

In April 2004 in Bangkok, Val showed her artworks for the first time. This became a permanent place of exhibition, from where her career was launched. Since that first show, Val held solo exhibitions and participated in contemporary art fairs with her galleries, spanning three continents, from Southeast Asia, Australia, to Europe, Val established herself as one of Asia’s most recognized and loved sculptors. After three major exhibitions in 2009 and 2010 in Singapore and Hong Kong, Val’s following and reputation grew exponentially. Even more so during her very noticeable participation at the Shanghai Art Fair 2010 and as part of the Jing'An International Sculpture Park Project with the presentation of her first monumental sculpture entitled Urban life

 

During the following years Val secured numerous solo exhibitions and public installations. She created numerous sculptures which have become synonymous with her artistic style. Among these sculptures, several have been denoted as masterpieces - Conversation au parc II and New-born child II (2010), Ville fantastique and Tango II (2011), Inle balance III and Eternal pillars (2012), Inéquilibre and Waiting III (2014), Flying lovers II and Attraction II (2015). In 2016 she entered the American art market with Simard Bilodeau Contemporary with immediate success.

 

Highlights from Val’s career also included the installation of Finding soulmate II at the Time Square Building in Hong Kong in 2011, the installation of three of her large sculptures including Inle balance III at the Sofitel Sukhumvit in Bangkok, her solo exhibition at the Art & Arch Museum in Taiwan, 2012, and the public installation of Waiting III at the New Square Tower in Taipei in 2014. In 2015, she also installed Inéquilibre at the Sky Suite Tower in Singapore and exhibited at the Franco-Chinese foundation Yish8 in Beijing, China, with an exhibition entitled Anatomy of a creative path.  In the same year, Val was commissioned to sculpt Du chaos à la sagesse (From Chaos to Wisdom) for a private collector in Taiwan. This resulting sculpture would culminate in her most spectacular artwork ever created spanning across a length of 36-meters and a height of almost 5-meters.

 

Since her settlement in Thailand, Val had been working exclusively with bronze, fuelled by its rich and expansive history in three-dimensional art. From mid-2015 however, Val discovered the ancestral art of glassmaking with the master glassmakers of Murano. The notion that voids in artworks were just as essential as the solid parts was important to Val. This balance of voids and solids is only determined through Val’s keen sense of visual rhythm. The addition of glass to her artworks served to provide meaning to her voids by creating a sense of sacredness through the appearance of Trompe-l’oeil. "With glass, the reality is not what it seems," Val states. From her apprenticeship with the master glassmakers of Murano, she created the Tenth eonian initiative from 2015 to 2016, a magnificent collection of sculptures consisting of glass, bronze and light.

 

2016 was an immense year. The Chinese Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing (CAFA) paid Val a rare tribute as a Western artist by organizing a retrospective exhibition of her work. Its museum acquired Autoportrait and Eternal pillars for its permanent collection. With the help of her husband, she then achieved the grand feat of installing Ocean utopia on the seabed of Koh Tao in Thailand.  This introduced extinct coral reefs back into Koh Tao’s ecosystem through the addition of three monumental sculptures. The three sculptures were made up of bronze, marine concrete, and extinct coral. Later in the year, Val’s 36-meters long sculpture, From Du chaos à la sagesse, would be completed and begin its bronze casting process (it would not be installed until 2017 on the heights of Taichung, Taiwan).  On October 27th, 2016, three weeks before her Tenth eonian initiative exhibition in Singapore opened, Val tragically died in a motor bike accident, between Pattaya and Bangkok.

 

Several important post-mortem installations were carried out with Val’s sculptures, including Ville fantastique II at Benjasiri Park in Bangkok in February 2017 (donation to the city was done during the lifetime of Val), a private sculpture park in Jouy-en-Josas (France) in May 2018 with six of her artworks including L'étreinte II and Attraction II and finally the acquisition of another edition of Attraction II by the Alliance Française de Bangkok in October 2019. In 2022, her large scale sculptures Chaos, Crossing the Ordeal and Wisdom were exhibited outdoors during the Venice Biennale in a satellite exhibition in Venice. 

 

This biography would not be complete if it did not evoke the personality of Val. She was out of this world, her face was constantly radiating with a luminous smile and she was imbued with a strong sense of humanity and deep kindness. Val was filled with inner-happiness, a state of being that appears so clearly in her work. 

 

Artworks