Sylvie Eudes, a painter by vocation and naturally demanding of herself, trained with the Norman artist Michel Clos before enrolling at the Gobelins School of Image in Paris. There, she acquired skills in drawing and animation, while also discovering the world of comics. The few years she then spent at the René Goscinny studio reinforced her passion for illustration and the creation of diverse characters.
Dominique Gais explores a style of painting that blends illusion and reality, leaving the viewer questioning what they see. Inspired by nature, she transforms its elements to create images that are both abstract and poetic. Her work plays with textures and merges photography and painting, blurring visual boundaries. Her demanding and unique art prioritizes artistic expression over any commercial endeavor.
Iveta Bradáčová, a Czech painter trained in Prague and Brno, focuses her work on local themes linked to specific places, times, and people. She explores collective memory and the connection between past and present through pictorial micro-histories.
My artistic practice is based on the idea that color and texture function as frequencies capable of altering perception, influencing attention, and triggering inner movements. Scale is not merely aesthetic; it is functional and captures the eye. Texture controls rhythm: it slows the gaze on raised surfaces and speeds it up on smooth ones. Color acts directly on the brain and mood.
Éric Delmare, a contemporary artist born in Morocco in 1958, grew up between Argentina and Switzerland and now works across several continents. A member of the République Ambulante group, he develops a body of work that blends painting, sculpture, and aesthetic reflection. He has exhibited internationally and undertaken monumental projects, notably in Africa. His work has received numerous awards, particularly for his original creations such as his artistic chess sets.
Amandine Bonneau, trained in featherwork in Paris, creates contemporary pieces using feathers as a living, luminous material. Through her brand Méri-Li, she blends fine craftsmanship and innovation, creating jewelry, accessories, and sculptures. Inspired by antique lace, she combines traditional techniques with modern design. Her work is based on a respectful approach and highlights the beauty and transformative potential of feathers.
Myriam de Lafforest is a sculptor inspired by humanity and Jungian philosophy. Trained by the sculptor Salvador Mañosa, she has developed a technique that combines lightness and mastery of bronze. Her works express emotions through balanced forms that defy gravity. She seeks to capture movement and a sense of letting go within the material.
This work explores the sensory representations of natural phenomena through ceramics, revealing an invisible nature and the possibilities for the world's regeneration. Inspired by object-oriented ontology, this approach challenges the primacy of the human in favor of an equality between all elements. The artist blends natural and industrial materials within a single work. Her practice thus underscores the interconnectedness and balance between all objects.
Stéphane Buyens' work explores the connections between form, matter, and function, blending the plant, mineral, and animal kingdoms. He values recycling and plays with textures to disrupt perception, transforming paper into stone and vice versa. His works are based on contrasts and balances of matter in motion. He invites the public to a sensory and tactile experience, renewing our relationship with nature.
This artist primarily sculpts in bronze to express the connection between humankind and nature, exploring the theme of humanity's journey through time and memory. He also works with marble and wood, depending on his inspiration. Based in the Hautes-Alpes region, his studio is surrounded by a sculpture park. His monumental works are exhibited in France and internationally, and are held in numerous private collections.
Myriam de Lafforest is a sculptor inspired by humanity and Jungian philosophy. Trained by the sculptor Salvador Mañosa, she has developed a technique that combines lightness and mastery of bronze. Her works express emotions through balanced forms that defy gravity. She seeks to capture movement and a sense of letting go within the material.