Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paris. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Collection SS2016: Les Ailes pleines de joie


 Les Ailes pleines de joie (‘Wings of joy’) is a hymn to Nature. 

Fluttering between earth and sky, a cloud of butterflies haloes a tree as round and bright as planet Earth; fish seem to fly, and all is simple, bright and cheerful. Inspired by Seventies Flower Power, Ljubomir Milinkov’s carré is a delicate, witty evocation of the radiant, natural world of his childhood. Life has taken the artist far from his home village of Sovac, in Serbia. 


In 1962, age 24, he flew to Paris to pursue his dream of becoming a painter. New York beckoned, and Milinkov lived for several years in the United States before returning to France, where Jean-Louis Dumas commissioned his first carré design, Jardin enchanté, in 1986.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Collection SS2015: Serio Ludere


Born in 1978, Nicolas Buffe developed a fascination for Japanese culture – its manga cartoons, comic strips and video games – at an early age. A graduate of the Beaux-Arts in Paris, he has lived in Tokyo since 2007, where his work explores a mix of Japanese Pop and traditional imagery. In 2010 he won the Grand Prix Appel à la Création Contemporaine, awarded by the International Centre for Tapestry and the Weaving Arts in Aubusson, France. In 2012, he created the decor and costumes for Haydn’s opera Orlando Paladino at the Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris. Tokyo’s Hara museum presents a solo exhibition of his work in 2014.


Serio Ludere (‘to play seriously’) was a precept dear to the hearts of the humanist authors of the Renaissance.  Serious matters were to be tackled with a lighthearted, playful touch – a wise approach saluting the need to stand back and see things in perspective, the clever knack of communicating deep thoughts with a pinch of humour and imagination.  This young French artist, steeped in Baroque and Renaissance art, mangas, comic strips and video games, presents a unique but characteristic composition – a clever mix of ancient forms and contemporary imagery. At its heart, an elephant symbolises playfulness and wisdom combined.  Bernini, the 18th-century sculptor and archetype of the Roman Baroque, perched his obelisk on the Piazza della Minerva on the back of an elephant.  His inspiration was an engraving from the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (the Dreams of Poliphilus), a celebrated book published in Venice in 1499 by Francesco Colonna. In it, the author explains that a hard head (like the elephant’s) is the best support for the burden of wisdom.  

Nicolas Buffe gives us hard-headed, playful baby elephant, perched on a rocking-stool.