Venues and dates
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Fromto
Opening hours
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday Closed Thursday, Friday 2PM - 6PM Saturday, Sunday 1PM - 7PM -
Prices
Free admission
The group show «The Blue Sky Has Fallen into the Forest» brings together six artists exploring the connections between plant, animal, human, and mineral worlds. Their works invite us to rethink the mutations of our landscapes, thus renewing our views on the living world.
Through the works of six artists, the group show «The Blue Sky Has Fallen into the Forest» creates a sensitive landscape where the boundaries between animal, human, plant, and mineral become porous and intertwine.
Underground voices, rhythms of living beings and celestial bodies, memories of vast expanses unfold through a variety of media (silk painting, ceramics, drawing, photography, video, light works) that converge to question the future of our landscapes. How do we view them in light of their transformation? What imaginaries do we project onto them?
Suspended ceramic interlacing (E. Elsenberger), colorful traces where the fluidity of gesture imprints itself on the surroundings (C. Figueras), images of disrupted expanses (F. Bonniot), landscapes of light like abstract horizons (M. Prangé), edges of light source apparitions (M. Faka), sketched beings floating between fall and leap (P. Jacquelin), the works respond to one another as so many attempts to shift our gaze and learn to perceive the world from its margins, its roots, its invisible breaths.
From primal landscapes to rediscovered utopias, from dreams of light to weightless mineral matter, the forms complement each other and compose a shared imaginary that questions a world of inverted perspectives.
Open on Thursdays and Fridays from 2 pm to 6 pm, and on Saturdays and Sundays from 1 pm to 7 pm.
Access via the main entrance to the biennial.
Audience
All ages
Featuring
Le 25 Ter - SCOP De Facto
VERNISSAGE
Through the works of six artists, the group show «The Blue Sky Has Fallen into the Forest» creates a sensitive landscape where the boundaries between animal, human, plant, and mineral become porous and intertwine.