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Histoires simples
Léopold Mottet 1 students
107 Féronstrée
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Qu’est-ce-qui se trame ici ?
Centre André Baillon
1 Féronstrée
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Night Walk
Maria Chiara Ziosi
85 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Thy Cities Shall With Commerce Shine — Part II
Hattie Wade
35 Rue Souverain Pont
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La Maison Panure – Fève des rois
JJ von Panure
21 Pont d'Île
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MANTERO
Santiago Vélez
4 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Mobile Écriture Automatique
Philippe José Tonnard
109 rue de la Cathédrale
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ST END
Pablo Perez
10 Rue Nagelmackers
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ALREADYMADE n° 3 : Empty Cart or Cardboard Cybertruck
M.Eugène Pereira Tamayo
18 Rue de l'Etuve
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Centre de remise en forme (économie de guerre)
Werner Moron
7 Rue de l'Official (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Sun(set)(Seed)
Matthieu Michaut
56 Rue Saint-Gilles
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precarity of non-human entities
Gérard Meurant
23 Rue Saint-Michel
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S’aligne, l’inconnue sans lecture
Julia Kremer
40 Rue Hors-Château
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Autumn Collages
Ívar Glói Gunnarsson Breiðfjörð
30 Rue de la Cathédrale
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Rōt Rot Rôt
Janina Fritz
28 Rue des Carmes
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Pierre ventilée
Daniel Dutrieux
14 Rue de la Populaire (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Peephole
Jacques Di Piazza
31a Rue de la Cathédrale
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Room Eater
Jorge de la Cruz
5 Rue Saint-Michel (Îlot Saint-Michel)
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Behind the Curtain
Francesca Comune
31b Rue de la Cathédrale
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COMMENT
Kim Bradford
16 Rue du Palais
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Pedro Camejo (série Diaspora)
Omar Victor Diop
25 Rue Saint Paul
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L’impasse de la vignette, dans le temps et dans l’espace
Michel Bart and Mathias Vancoppenolle
75 Rue Hors-Château
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Opéra-savon, épisode 1 : L’ Aquarium-Museum
Clara Agnus
20 Rue de la Sirène
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Supernature
#2
Safia Hijos
Curator : La peau de l’ours
34Hôtel de la Cour de Londres 40 Rue Hors-Château
Safia Hijos invites us to enter into a singular stoneware « Winter Garden » : cascades and bunches of foliage on the walls, « Tulip Trees » garnished with natural flowers placed on a base. Does Safia Hijos have a craze for the plants to decorate our living rooms ?
The taste for indoor green plants has been essentially introduced in the coursed of the 19th century, during the rise of the Industrial Revolution, the development of the greenhouse architecture and the improving heating techniques. Inside the Salon Bourgeois, the exotic indoor plant has lost its functional qualities and joins the decorative objects as an expression of the social status and the self. It is the dreamy era of eclecticism, a time when the new society was filled with dreams (Gothic, Chinese, Persian, and Renaissance). It is a time when the look lost itself in the glimmering of the mirrors and the psyches, where gas was shining in the globes that were similar to opalescent moons.
Each of us only dreams of a sudden joy. Is Safia Hijos inviting us to look back at the enigma from the inside, space of our existential experiences, to decode the contours of the soul more than the contours of the things ? The ceramist covered those greenery Falls and flowered tulip trees with enamels, overlaid with lead (toxic when applied), that yet decorate the stoneware with matchless green and yellow varnished colors. Taking a closer look at it, there is overall something excessive, in the complication of the shapes and the declension of the olive-green/emerald tones that forces the taste and jeopardizes it. A kind of worried euphoria. To what feast or primitive scene is Safia inviting us ? To the union of the mineral, the bodies and the vegetal, three states of the world, three forms of being that can be measured, have an end, that yet elude all measurements and all ends.
