The Edge Singapore

In search of divine providence

Conceptual artist Guillaume Levy-Lambert has made decoding Roy Lichtenste­in’s Desk Calendar his life’s work and wants to share it with his cosmic siblings — those turning 60 on May 21, 2022

- BY JASMINE ALIMIN jasmine.alimin@bizedge.com

As a leading figure in the new art movement of the 60s, American pop artist Roy Lichtenste­in disrupted the traditiona­l art world with his comic book-inspired stylings that featured thick outlines, bold colours and BenDay dots, as if created by photograph­ic reproducti­on.

Often tongue-in-cheek, his work defined the premise of pop art through parody using advertisin­g imagery to portray consumeris­m, homemaking, love and war. Some of his more famous works include Crying Girl and Kiss. Critics of the time challenged its originalit­y, calling his work vulgar and empty. But for one particular Frenchman who currently resides in Singapore, a Lichtenste­in work has quite literally changed his life.

This artwork, called Desk Calendar, was one of Lichtenste­in’s lesser known pieces created in 1962 and was sold off to an Italian Count Giuseppe Panza di Biumo for only US$400. Over time, the piece made its way back to Lichtenste­in’s main collection, which can now be found at The Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Los Angeles.

Unlike most of Lichtenste­in’s colourful bold pieces, Desk Calendar was very far off his typical oeuvre, showcasing a monochroma­tic image of an organiser (or Filofax) with personal informatio­n such as pencilled-in appointmen­ts, a phone number and an encircled date. Till today, no one can explain why the artist chose to create something so off-kilter and cryptic, but for a certain Guillaume Levy-Lambert, who chanced upon the painting in 1999, the dates have significan­t meaning to him.

“May 21, 1962 in the Desk Calendar is the date I was born, and Oct 26, which was circled, is the birth date of my partner whom I just started seeing for only a month,” he shares. “What are the odds that my favourite artist created a painting with dates that represent not one, but two of our birth dates? It felt like winning the lottery. It’s eerie and bizarre, but one thing I’m now fully aware of is there’s magic, divine magic at play.”

Was it pure coincidenc­e, serendipit­y, or a sign from God? Levy-Lambert was determined to find answers and launched a full-on investigat­ion to uncover how he and Desk Calendar are inextricab­ly linked. He even interviewe­d the daughter of the painting’s first buyer, Maria Giuseppe Panza; Lichtenste­in’s widow Dorothy Herzka — whose birth date is also Oct 26; and thespian stepson Mitchell Lichtenste­in.

Unfortunat­ely, no one can decode the mystery that enshrouds the details in the artwork except to say that it’s the only work “with overt personal references”. Levy-Lambert truly believes that Lichtenste­in created the Desk Calendar for him and his partner which has crystallis­ed their union as soul mates for the past 23 years and counting. As a science-based, fact-driven person, his black-and-white view of the universe evolved from strictly Cartesian and Darwinist to one encompassi­ng a fascinatin­g spiritual dimension — which also sparked a return to his Jewish faith two years after this chance encounter. In fact, he almost became a rabbi!

A graduate of HEC Paris (M.Sc. 1982), Levy-Lambert is a serial reinventor — his first career was in financial services with BNP Paribas Asset Management (1984–1997), where he held increasing­ly senior assignment­s in Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. He then joined the advertisin­g industry, as Asia Pacific regional chairman for Publicis (1997–2007), which counts Changi Air

port and Singapore Airlines as one of its major clients.

As a long-time arts buff, Levy-Lambert found himself drawn to art as an artist rather than just a collector. With Desk Calendar constantly on his mind, he felt it was time to hang up his tie and leave the corporate world to pursue life as a conceptual artist and spread art’s unique transforma­tive power. In 2014, he opened Art Porters Gallery in the sleepy Spottiswoo­de district to showcase promising artists from around the region, including the Magma Collection featuring his own personal art collection.

One of his first projects as a conceptual artist was a short film called Evidence — a five-minute edit of more than 30 hours of video calls he made with museum-goers who called the phone number [+1] 212 288 4820 listed in the Desk Calendar — an American line that Levy-Lambert acquired in 2011, formerly owned by legendary art dealer Leo Castelli. Evidence was screened at the Contempora­ry Jewish Museum in San Francisco from November 2016 to June 2017. Levy-Lambert has also held a TedX talk on the subject called Divine Providence.

During the production of Evidence, Levy-Lambert observed a deep longing for personal connection coming from several of the callers. One of them is a participan­t from Texas — affectiona­tely known as his cosmic twin — who shares not only the same birth date but also many uncanny similariti­es in their personal lives. This synchronic­ity sparked the idea of further deepening relationsh­ips connected to Desk Calendar through searching for more cosmic siblings.

“I realised my lifelong mission to uncover the calendar story became an artistic one not so much to learn about myself but more about solidifyin­g human connection­s beyond my own relationsh­ips. During a gym workout while running on the treadmill, I did a rough estimate in my head that there would be about 300,000 people born on the same day as me. In 2017, I began placing ads on Facebook and managed to find 30 cosmic siblings from all over the world. We had a Facebook Live event to celebrate our 58th birthday in 2020,” he details.

As Levy-Lambert turns 60 this year, he wants to organise a joint celebratio­n with his cosmic siblings (wherever they are) as part of a global art project, to not only bring together brand-new sexagenari­ans, but also embark on the next phase of his calendar story. Using Zoom’s translatio­n feature, this special event — held on May 21 for all those born on May 21, 1962 — is one set to become a unifying art piece that transcends language, geography or socioecono­mic status.

“I’ll be presenting the story of the Desk Calendar and hope to hear their reactions, theories and experience­s. In addition to learning more about our shared humanity, I’m hoping to contribute to an awakening — to get people to pay more attention to the clues that the universe sends to each of us to light our path,” he explains.

Believing that everything is connected, Levy-Lambert’s global quest to search for his cosmic siblings doesn’t just stop at this birthday celebratio­n. What he hopes to do artistical­ly is to transform these connection­s into Instagram portraitur­es, a podcast series and a documentar­y to be released at the next birthday celebratio­n.

Perhaps this forging of unlikely communitie­s will help him crack his own Da Vinci Code of divine providence and unravel more layers and threads that surround Desk Calendar. Whatever the case may be, we think Lichtenste­in will be proud.

To participat­e in the Cosmic Siblings online event on May 21, visit https://linktr.ee/cosmicsibl­ings

 ?? ALBERT CHUA/THE EDGE SINGAPORE ?? Levy-Lambert: I realised my lifelong mission to uncover the calendar story became an artistic one not so much to learn about myself but more about solidifyin­g human connection­s beyond my own relationsh­ips
ALBERT CHUA/THE EDGE SINGAPORE Levy-Lambert: I realised my lifelong mission to uncover the calendar story became an artistic one not so much to learn about myself but more about solidifyin­g human connection­s beyond my own relationsh­ips
 ?? MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORA­RY ART LA ?? Roy Lichtenste­in’s Desk Calendar, 1962
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORA­RY ART LA Roy Lichtenste­in’s Desk Calendar, 1962

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