The craftsman's or artist's studio is a world in itself. How does this world generate forms, and what imaginaries are produced? Claire Georgina Daudin and Lou Nugues take up these questions through a sensitive study of two workshop-worlds, exploring the worlds they enclose.
The workshop is the place where activities are organized and productions are born. A veritable microcosm where a world of its own unfolds, this space is rich in forms and objects born of meticulous work, organized according to a production logic that reflects creative vision and know-how. It's an inhabited world, a place of daily activity, a place of encounter, exchange and transmission.
The exhibition will take place in the exhibition space of the laMezz workshop, just a stone's throw from Les Grandes Locos. By highlighting the practices and forms born of these ateliers-monde, the exhibition will offer a subtle dialogue between past and present. The works proposed by Claire Georgina Daudin and Lou Nugues embody the artistic rebirth of places imbued with memory and sharing, echoing the artistic intent of the biennial.
L'atelier comme monde An exhibition by Claire Georgina Daudin and Lou Nugues November 8 to 24, 2024 At Atelier laMezz, 14 rue de la Grande Allée, 69310 Oullins-Pierre-Bénite Access Métro B station Gare d'Oullins then 10 min walk bus 17 and 15 stop Yon Lug Or via A7 exit 3 to Oullins/La Saulaie
Open: Saturdays and Sundays from 11am to 5pm and by appointment at claire.daudin@gmail.com
Audience
all audiences
In Lyon metropolitan area
Pierre-Bénite
Event(s) around the project
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Atelier LaMezz
The exhibition project is based on the encounter between the work of two artists, Claire Georgina Daudin and Lou Nugues, through specific workshops. Each in her own way has taken up the plastic questions raised by the study of craftsmen's and artists' studios.
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Atelier LaMezz
How is the Saulaie district of Oullins changing? On this walk, you'll look at the traces of the past, the metamorphoses at work and their meaning for the future of the district. By Lucie Van Der Meulen, urban planner and sociologist, Atelier Minga