Since the late 1980s, Jean-Luc Moul癡ne (b. 1955) has developed a body of work informed by a critical investigation of artistic authorship, addressing such issues as autonomy, immanence, and
anarchic politics. Although he is best known for his enigmatic and seductive large-format photographs, Moul癡ne has maintained a parallel exploration of materials and objects��anufactured and
found, industrial and organic, intimate and imposing��hat he has collectively titled Opus. This book, the first critical study of Moul癡ne's work, brings together leading scholars to
examine the artist's diverse aesthetic strategies and interests in the relationships between social and political arenas and systems and orders, including geometry, mathematics, social
sciences, and human behavior. Featured essays also examine Moul癡ne's theoretical and playful inquiries into the plasticity of materials and the ways we see and understand both still and
moving images.