Exhibition of Anne Clavel, Michelle Braesch and Philippe Chocq.
Anne Clavel: Training in plastic arts at the University of Strasbourg and a postgraduate degree at the French Institute of Fashion in Paris.
Collage, assembly and hybridization are at the center of her artistic practice, mixing nature and artifice, matter and memory, with threads, fibers or ropes as binders. She likes to play with changes of scale, going from installation to miniature. Whether in the field of illustration or...
Exhibition of Anne Clavel, Michelle Braesch and Philippe Chocq.
Anne Clavel: Training in plastic arts at the University of Strasbourg and a postgraduate degree at the French Institute of Fashion in Paris.
Collage, assembly and hybridization are at the center of her artistic practice, mixing nature and artifice, matter and memory, with threads, fibers or ropes as binders. She likes to play with changes of scale, going from installation to miniature. Whether in the field of illustration or installation, she likes to plunge the spectator into a dreamlike and theatrical universe, where the strange rubs shoulders with the magical.
Michelle Braesch : She lives and works in Haute-Saône.
Her artistic practice, after drawing and painting, is oriented towards sculpture and installation. Assembly of objects collected in the natural spaces crossed. Installation in situ where mineral, vegetable, animal are transformed by building a personal mythological universe.
Philippe Chocq : The pictorial work of this artist is more focused on color and light, in an inner and sensitive quest that is not exempt from mysticism... A tension specific to each of his paintings that will certainly find an interesting echo in this place dedicated to stone, stained glass and the elevation of the spirit. Philippe Chocq studied at the ENSBA in Paris and Plastic Arts at the University of Strasbourg. "With the figure of the circle and the image of the wheel, the folded, inverted space, from where we are at one moment, to the center of the movement, we orient ourselves and lose ourselves."