Interview

Head in the Water – Interview with Talking Shell –

Camille Mercier, aka Talking Shell, is a jewelry designer and illustrator. Her exceptionally delicate work is largely inspired by the biology of wild and aquatic worlds. In this interview, which I am extremely proud to present to you, she expresses herself for the first time on the meaning of her work and takes us on a journey through the world of plankton with a communicative joy.

Can you introduce yourself, what is your background ? 

I’m Camille, I’m 27 years old and I live in Versailles, France, a beautiful city very close to its conservative cliché !  I studied Applied Arts in Paris for a year (scenography, graphism, drawing…). Soon after, I wanted to learn a craft profession, something very  technical that would never leave my hands, which would help me translate drawings into 3D creations. I hesitated between studying  stained-glass, lace, corsetry or lingerie, but I had a big crush for the BJOP School, (Haute Ecole de Bijouterie Paris) where I learned french  traditional high jewelry technics, CAD, jewelry painting, gemmology for 2 years, and jewelry design for 2 more years.  After 4 years studying in the backstages of the french high-jewlery scene, I didn’t feel that my work would make a change at a social or  environnemental level. So I choosed to work as a supervisor in a boarding school in Versailles instead, which has a pedagogic aspect that I enjoy. I have a weird rythm and work mostly by night, I make my art every time I have a moment for myself. Sometimes I bring some work at so I can share a little of the process with the students too.

Facemasks, earrings, crowns, necklaces and many others, you have a wonderful and varied work of creation of jewels, with a vocabulary that comes from biology. Can you present it to us ? 

In a few words, I would say that my creations are jigsaw puzzles of details with a fragile balance.
I like them to be seen as adornments, prosthesis, masks, but also as purely useless structures, just there to sparkle for a few moments in the eye.

The mask has been my main preoccupation for the last 2 years; it is at the same time a tool of pure identity expression, a fascinating area of the body to explore, (and thus rich in technical challenges).
This taste for the mask is hyper linked to my fascination for digital filters and virtual worlds. I find some of them so beautiful, so magical, that I want to create my own with the means at hand, that is to say my knowledge in jewelry.
I feel very happy when someone asks me if my masks are «real» or not !

My masks etc are very fragile for a reason; I always look for a kind of «extreme» delicacy in the shapes, which I think reminds us of the ephemeral nature of beauty, to provoke a feeling of being confronted to a moving, living maze of details.

They also have an intrinsic relationship with my body and my own biology, which is in a way the basic ingredient of my inspiration. I also draw on the biology of the wild world to translate my senses and concerns into a language that is both visual and intuitive. I work a lot with analogy, which allows me to look for synchronicities between my behavior and the world around me, between the biological capacities of an animal or a plant and the hopes I have for my future self.

How is your creative process organized ? 

As my practice is fairly new and constantly evolving, I don’t have an organization as such. However there are recurring elements in each project, there is always a new technical challenge for example.
I started making my own jewelry in early 2018, in response to a need to create objects that feel like me. I was exhausted from hiding.
I was dealing with the aftermath of dissociative disorders and PTSD, so forcing myself to work from my own face and body helped tremendously.
I started by standing in front of my mirror and carefully observing my face as a landscaper or a surgeon would, and little by little, playing with artificial petals or pieces of brass wire I created my first mask called «Terrible butinerie, tous les jardiniers sont morts». (It’s a kind of wordplay, butinerie is a mix between the verb butiner and mutinerie, so it means «Terrible butinerie, all the gardeners are dead».)

Since then I have been working systematically in front of my mirror, very slowly. I have to be very careful to not hurt my face when I use  metal or hot glue, I take the time to observe my bone structure. This slowness, working in detail has an extremely calming effect on me, it helps me to stay focused on one thing at a time (I get distracted very easily) and to learn to link self-expression with discipline. While slowing the pace of thought to develop a synthesis of simultaneous dreams through a drawing or an object, I find a place of healing and gratefulness.   

The mask has become a tool for self-expression, a revelation of what is hidden, intrinsic, but it is also a kind of protection, of camouflage that helps me feel more honest, uninhibited and a bit proud. 

Each mask is linked in one way or another to one of the five senses, or to a specific feeling which I love to translate in my own terms. The «Anemonargh» facemask for example refracts the sensation of water rising to the mouth, of an appetite that is both voracious and very attentive to the most subtle tastes. The underboob necklace underlines the sensation of the chest about to explode during premenstrual syndrome, while the golden mask «Solar winds blowing a moth into pieces» expresses a joy that explodes an old representation of the Self. 

Finishing a mask is like finishing a chrysalis, that I can put away with the feeling of having changed into a more honest person, more full of herself. Allowing myself to do what I like is also how I manage to express generosity to myself and others.
I always feel like I’ve been travelling into a far away and timeless land, and I am bringing back memories and gifts to my friends.

The selfie and the sharing on social networks is entirely part of the process of healing, once it’s shared, it’s done, like «I finally said it, even if I feel so, so very clumsy.» With time, at each post on @talking.shell (the alias wasn’t choosen by hazard, it’s inspired from the anime Ghost in the Shell and the amazing cartoon Song of the Sea), this moment feels easier.
And it can just be a nice moment where the 27 year old me winks at the 13 year old Camille, where I give myself all the cutest, brightest and sometimes a little bit provocative stuff I’ve ever dreamed of !

We find in your work a strong interest for the living world, and especially the aquatic world, what are its origins ? And what are the media that allow you to feed this interest (scientific resources, books, websites, documentaries, etc.) ? Does this make you claim an ecological dimension in your work ?

Pleasure !
I have a very vivid memory of the first time I went to the beach when I was 2 years old. I remember it as the most irrationnal thing I have ever seen, it felt like a totally new dimension. Exploring, running butt naked on the beach with nothing to do but play is heaven !
While bathing and playing in the sand, you are constantly tickeld by something.
For me, this is where I started to develop a sense of erotism (that I really differenciate from sexuality here), a very natural sense of pleasure.
For the little anecdote, my first dream tinted with erotism involved a cloud and a sea anemona tickling the back of my knee !
I was also very deeply shocked by the shipwreck of the oil tanker Erika on the coasts of Brittany and its consequences on the wildlife.
I explored some injuried areas with my class when I was 6 years old and it was both a great experience of observations in team, but also a source of anger and a feeling of helplessness.
Seing how obsessed I was, my mother bought me a book called «My friend of the seas», with some simple scientific informations about the seas, winds, wildlife on the beach.. This is how it started !

When I discovered the world of plankton during an exhibition at the Museum of Natural History in Paris, I definitely fell in love with the abyss and the teeming unknown that is hidden there, constantly multiplied.
It was the day scientists presented the first photo of a black hole. I prefer to look at what’s going on down there.We know more about the surface of the Moon or Mars than we do about our oceans. I think it says a lot about humans. Of course, no one wants to “reach the bottom”, darkness and depths are still equated with hell. But it’s really a paradise teeming with life and a reservoir of knowledge and revelations !

The Pleurobrachia Pileus plays a major role of inspiration in my work. When I discovered this macroplankton specie, I was simultaneously obsessed with the electricity that runs through the different areas of the human brain, and I was trying to materialize this electrical network in the form of a mask.
I found that the millions of bioluminescent cilia and the oval body of the pleurobrachia resembled my representations of my own neural electricity. It was a funny unexplained feeling of kinship that still obsesses me.
Why the pleurobrachia, why do I have the intimate feeling that this tiny creature is “me” in another form?
It lives in darkness, and despite its gelatinous and entirely translucent body, it evolves gracefully, perfectly adapted to the pressure of the waters.
It has no eyes, but it has millions of tiny luminous eyelashes that vibrate at full speed, and two long arms thinner than hair. It doesn’t need light, it makes its own, and this also serves as a signal, a “language” of sorts. It is a predator the size of a gooseberry.
It often comforts me to know that there are tiny, seemingly vulnerable creatures that live in symbiosis with their environment through wonders of extremely refined behavior.

I learned later that this peculiar specie is the one of the first to develop a neural system ! I was mindblown by the synchronicity between my physical sensation of electricity, this kindred intuition, and the biological history of the Pleurobrachia.
This particular moment got me obsessed with phylogeny, (the study of the links between related species) and I am still looking for synchronicities between strange organisms and ourselves, to finally reveal it in my own way, through jewelry for example.
It is the wildlife that brings me the most comfort, confidence and peace. Emphasizing the connection between a flourishing mentalhealth and a rich, beautiful and respected environment, inspiring curiosity, ultimately empathy for either is I hope a consequence of my approach.

I check in regularly: 

https://oceans.taraexpeditions.org

http://planktonchronicles.org/fr/ 

https://www.futura-sciences.com

Some of my favourite books are written by sailors; The Long Road by Bernard Moitessier, Cette nuit, la mer est noire by Florence Arthaud. 

I also enjoy reading Ernst Haeckel, Darwin and Lamarck, especially their thoughts on phylogeny. Claire Nouvian (abysses), Christian Sardet (plankton), François Sarano’s work about sperm whales.

I watch a lot of documentaries; Chasing Corals, Night on Earth – Mission Blue is my favorite, about the life of Dr Sylvia Earle who one of my  favorite heroins ! 

The movie Oceans is a basic, I also go through the BBC Earth (Blue Planet) and National Geographic networks. 

I follow a hundred instagram accounts like: @jam_and_germs, @waterbod, @womanscientist, @marine.animals @the_story_of_a_biologist, @noaaoceanexploration, @800down, @fondationtaraoceans

French speaking friends, I recommend you @hugorichel dissertation “L’Odyssée des Abysses”, which is really great ! I also grew up with the Tv show Thalassa 🙂 

I listen a lot to whale songs (humpback whales mainly, dolphins etc). 

You also have an important practice of drawing, which can be seen on @magma.seed, your second Instagram account.  You express a generous graphism through its details and arborescence, which can be reflected in sweet and powerful organic forms. Can you talk about this work, and how you relate it to your jewelry design activity ?

@talking.shell is the evolution of the @magma.seed Pokemon.


I am glad you mention this, these accounts are stages of my evolution but also two facets of my personality. They might look like opposites somehow (black and white versus colors) but to me they truly go hand-in-hand.


@magma.seed is a raw tiny ball of energy, judgmental as hell, who likes to analyse and dissect everything she scans in an enormous pattern of tiny details.
I always draw the eyes of the characters first, their vision lead the rest of the drawing.
At the end of it I want to have the intense feeling that I synthetized the contrasts, the contradictions in me to the point that I feel like I didn’t do this drawing myself.
So the use of black & white is very important to me, I like that it is so exacting, half warm, half violent.


After around 10 years of drawing in this style, not really moving out of this comfort zone I looked for a way to work in color, which I didn’t feel comfortable with, and this frustration coincided with the discovery of digital filters and my desire to use my knowledge of jewelry.
I needed to develop a cheerful universe around me at that time, and to claim my need for fun, for nuances.


In january 2018 I made the decision to find a way to show this side of my personality that I kept inhibited and shy. I wanted to share another face, at first it felt like wearing masks was something very provocative. My sister told me multiple times «You are finally coming out !».
I buzzed my head (which is still a punk thing in Versailles haha) and created the alias @talking.shell which was an expression of my will to give one of my facets a voice.
She is another part of the puzzle, eager to communicate with other humans and who gets dressed up for the occasion.
She wants to play, to experiment lighteness, sensuality and to share it with her friends, to transmit her interests and passions. She is way less of a perfectionist than @magma.seed and would allow herself lots of mistakes.
The masks are a kind of metamorphosis tools in a quest for identity, they have to be delicate, so they can meet a newborn self, carrying it to another edge.
Delicate is my kindest way of precision, an empathetic side of respect, and patience the calm way of my determination.

The drawing process has changed a lot since I started making my masks, it has become a moment of rest, a kind of refuge after spending a lot of time in holographic colors and rhinestones. There is something tiring about showing my face (even masked) on a social network, especially after looking at it in detail during the whole creation process. I like to hide a little sometimes.

So these two are as different as complementary now, it often makes me think of the myth of Persephone, a goddess of eternal spring, who spends 6 months on earth, 6 months in the underworld. Whether it’s on one side or the other, she cultivates her secret gardens.

How would you define the artistic sphere in which you are involved ? And what are the creators that you think are important to include in it ? 

I would say that it is a sphere that defines itself as a breach, an intersection between biomimicry and technomimicry.
It includes an abundance of identity researches, hybrid self-expression tools; between make-up, VR filters, jewelry and clothing.
With this creative dynamism, I feel like social networks like Instagram have become a kind of video game where you can embody as many aspects of yourself as necessary, “choose your fighter” moments, a pantheon of avatars which goes hand in hand with a dynamic of self-seeking.
Dystopias blend into everyday life, anchoring dreams in a continually archaic world.

One of the aspects I feel very close to is a metamorphosis of the notion of craftsmanship, which I feel is gradually giving up its cliché “dirty hands and wooden tools». Iris Van Herpen is a prime example of a hybrid creator with haute couture technics mixed with 3D printed structures and materials.

I cannot talk about the artistic sphere in which I am involved without talking about the artists I’ve been in contact with, and how their influence guided me in my art-therapy process. I love to think that their is no such artistic sphere (at a personal level at least) without friendly and caring interactions. Without those open hearted talks late at night, without sharing doubts or technical difficulties, without support etc, no sphere or «community» would happen.
So one of the best ideas I had during these 3 years was to keep in mind @ines.alpha’s advices all along. Independently of her incredible sense of integrity and discipline in her art, thinking about it is always an intense source of enthousiasm and bravery. Her bold and colorful work feels to me as an invitation to trust myself.
@proxima2000taur has been an incredibly supportive friend and an inspiring artistic presence. He plays a huge role into this sphere, using his face and body almost like land art. He definitely is some of the creators that make me think about an interesection between biomimicry and technomimicry, alongside with @antr0morph for example. They share an interesting way of blending their personal lives with dystopias in order to propel themselves into the future. @nusi_quero and @uaun are milestones in this sphere. As Nusi inspires me to refract an impetuous generosity, Uaun’s work is an invitation to look inward more closely, to explore my blind spots and dig out the roots of my energy. The words entanglement and diffraction/refraction often came back in our discussions and it inspired me to use more photoshop in my creative process in order to multiply the shapes I realised in metal etc.

I am fascinated with artists like @casey_curran, @lokidolor, @james.t.merry of course, but also @hany_b__ and @11v151131_m06@harriet.blend or @andrewthomashuang, @entangledothers, @adem.elahel…  

As for my drawings on @magma.seed, I feel close to Belkis Ayon and the Spirit Codex by Solange Knopf. 

You worked with Sarah Mayer on the creation of an Instagram filter from one of your masks, called Pleurobrachia. How did this collaboration go ? 

Working with Sarah felt like an evidence and it was so simple ! I sent her two pictures of the mask, a video of a pleurobrachia, a few indications about textures and movements… And she just made it happen and translated it perfectly !
It was a dream come true, when I made the mask I constantly imagined it moving, shiny and a bit glossy.
We are actually thinking about updating the filter for Instagram !

What are your current projects ? 

Now that I have been exploring my face, hiding it under strass and petals, I am taking a few steps back to reflect on what happened during these last 3 years. I think that I am done sitting and trying to look pretty behind my masks, it’s time to investigate other parts of my body, to expand the space my work occupies, which implies a lot of new challenges !

I am increasingly interested in creating complete characters, and to give them a context, an environment, a voice.
I’ve spent a lot of time looking for delicacy, sparkles and a form of grace in my work, intimately linked to a questioning of my femininity, and I realize that I stayed in this representation of myself in order to avoid expressing the qualified as «raw» and «violent» sides of my personality.
The thing is this side might be carrying the roots of my creative energy and the craddle of my emotions. I want to give it more space.

I also realized that I was not sharing the trajectories of thought, the reflections that I was making during the making of the masks, that until now I have not shared the “why” of my creations. For each mask, I have dozens of stories to tell and I think I’ll share them via the website I’m working on.
Let’s just say that I feel like I’ve reached a point where I need to allow myself some “maturity” and confidence to move forward into a new stage of my journey, which also includes thinking about how I would like to earn a living, create a positive dynamic in response to environmental issues, and thrive in the creative process.
I am also very eager to be able to exhibit my work, at the moment a few people have been able to see my masks in real life or try them on and I can’t wait to make it happen !
I am actually working on a custom wedding mask and this is a very good challenge. I am considering making a few small facemasks for sale, to celebrate these last 3 years of hesitations and my will to have faith and move on.

A heartfelt thank you to Camille for her answers, for the time and energy she devoted to it.

Interview by Charline Kirch

Featured image credit : Planktonic Sword by Talking Shell

Find on the Expo156 ‘s Instagram account a curation of works and images elaborated with Talking Shell that will make you continue our journey through the deep sea 🦑

🌊

Whole New Worlds

Something is Happening

Something is clearly happening. This is something we said to each other at “Hortus Conclusus”, the last exhibition I had the pleasure of visiting, organized by students from the art school in the city where I live. These words every time they are pronounced make me feel an immense joy, an impatience about the future and a sense of gratitude to be experiencing the best that the present is able to offer us. Something is happening, we are unable to name this something, but yet we can feel it collectively, deep inside ourselves. It is something that is related to the most beautiful energy. It is no longer a question of being afraid to create beauty, or even to force ourselves to do it. The dualisms are slowly disappearing. And many things that previously seemed contradictory now seem complementary. There is something that is becoming unlocked, liberated, open. I think of the keys of Naïa Combary, which she talks about so well in “Women artists are dangerous”, the podcast in which she was invited. There are magical objects that can unlock things in our mind, to empower us. There is something clearly to do with feminist, queer, anti-racist and environmentalist struggles that give us so much hope, and project us into worlds so much more dignified. Blossoming, rebirth and regenerating worlds where there is always something happening.

✨🗝✨

Il se passe clairement quelque chose. C’est quelque chose que nous nous sommes dit à “Hortus Conclusus”, la dernière exposition que j’ai eu le bonheur de visiter, organisée par des étudiant.e.s aux Beaux-Arts de la ville dans laquelle je réside. Ces mots à chaque fois qu’ils sont prononcés me plongent dans une joie immense, une impatience dans l’avenir et un sentiment de gratitude de pouvoir vivre le meilleur dont le présent est capable de nous offrir. Il se passe quelque chose, nous sommes incapables de nommer ce quelque chose, mais pourtant nous pouvons arriver à le ressentir collectivement, au fond de nous-mêmes, intérieurement. C’est quelque chose qui a à voir avec la plus belle des énergies. Il n’est plus question d’avoir peur de créer du beau, ni même de s’obliger à le faire. Les dualismes s’effacent peu à peu. Et beaucoup de choses qui semblaient jusqu’alors contradictoires nous paraissent désormais complémentaires. Il y a quelque chose qui est en train de se débloquer, de se libérer, de s’ouvrir. Je pense aux clés de Naïa Combary dont elle parle si bien dans « Les femmes artistes sont dangereuses », le podcast dans lequel elle a été invitée. Il y a des objets magiques à même de déverrouiller des choses dans notre esprit, de nous empouvoirer. Il y a quelque chose d’évident à voir avec les luttes féministes, queer, antiracistes et écologistes qui nous donnent beaucoup d’espoir, et nous projettent dans des mondes tellement plus dignes. Des mondes en fleurs, renaissants et régénérés où il se passe toujours quelque chose.

Hortus Conclusus

Text by Charline Kirch // Texte par Charline Kirch

I thank from the bottom of my heart all the people I met and those who were involved in “Hortus Conclusus”. Élise Deubel and Garance Henry, Talking Shell and Proxima2000taur for your precious feedbacks. Élise Deubel, Naïa Combary and Marie Léon for your wonderful keys. Naïa Combary for this magical podcast.

Je remercie du fond du cœur toutes les personnes que j’ai rencontrées et celles qui ont pris part à “Hortus Conclusus”. Élise Deubel et Garance Henry, Talking Shell et Proxima2000taur pour vos précieux retours. Élise Deubel, Naïa Combary et Marie Léon pour vos magnifiques clés. Naïa Combary pour ce podcast magique.

Interview

Eromorphosis(1) Les Âmes en Fleurs. Interview with Valentin Ranger

“Eromorphosis (1) Les Âmes en Fleurs” is a 3D film directed by the artist Valentin Ranger. This film presents us with a virtual poetic walk through the villa Noailles, around a profusion of sculptural and theatrical installations, metamorphoses celebrating the diversity of bodies, Love and the fragility of flowers. I wanted to talk with Valentin about his film because I was moved by this work, by its tenderness, its hybrid graphic beauty, its power to enchant.

Can you introduce yourself and your plastic work?

My name is Valentin Ranger, I am an artist and I am currently working in Paris. I worked in the theater before entering the Beaux-Arts de Paris. My artistic mediums vary between 3D, installation and drawing. My research evolves with the understanding of how the body functions and interacts with its environment at a quantum and macroscopic level, carnal and spiritual. 3D allows me to build an ecosystem that celebrates our mutations, our fluidity and our ability to connect to new narratives, linked by post-human and anthropological questions.

Following a residency that you did at the Villa Noailles in June 2020, you made a film entitled “Eromorphosis” (1) Les Âmes en Fleurs”. How did the residency and the creation of this film go?

I went to the Villa Noailles to work on an exhibition (Heroes/Heroïnes) where I made drawings. The exhibition was a true testimony of the solidarity and love that resides inside the Villa Noailles. During this residency I had the chance to discover an incredible architecture, but above all a sunny, generous and very inspiring team. It is a place of immense creative strength. The region is magnificent, the vegetation is lush, everything led to contemplation and dream.

There is in your film an invitation to let go, something very heartwarming. It also seems to be part of a form of surreality. There is the presence of Marie-Laure de Noailles, who was a supporter of the Surrealist movement. She also appears in Man Ray’s “Les Mystères du Château de Dé” filmed at the Villa Noailles in 1929. The Villa is like transfigured in your film, bathing in art and vegetation. How did the figure of Marie-Laure de Noailles and the architecture of her Villa help you to construct soothing visual landscapes, rich in beauty and symbolism? What meaning do you give to all these visions?

The architecture of the place, conceived by the architect Mallet-Stevens, was strongly inspired by a ship that I wanted to rethink as a ship flying through the cosmos. I was very inspired by the influence of Marie Laure on Dali, Man Ray, Brancusi and Cocteau. There is a lot of love inside this place, a celebration of flowers through the gardens, a tolerance for beautiful dreams.

It was the perfect place to tell the story of the creation of new body forms, linked to our powerful and sensitive image of flowers, to their diversity. I wanted to imagine a new form of poetic and sensual reproduction, the birth of a new species linked to these new bonds. Focused on tenderness, vulnerable but strong.

You use 3D modeling not as a means of realistic representation but rather as an extension of your visual world. We can see it with the integration of your floral drawings or for example with “les laboureurs du cœur” which by their bodies, their textures evoke living sculptures. Can you tell us about them?

Drawing is a real support for my work, it is a place of freedom that directly welcomes our instincts and sometimes our fragility. There is an ambivalence that exists within this film where the sculptures cannot live but still try to deliver a message of love. The creatures are protected from the deep construction that we have of our representations of the body. These bodies are rather metamorphoses of feelings and inner affect. The biomorphic sculptures are filled with magic, phantasmagoria, and assumed interiority. There are no rules that prevent them from loving.

In a description of your film, you mention a celebration of the diversity of bodies. What place do you give to queer identities in your work in general?

Thanks to the Queer community’s fight against exclusion, new bodies are acquiring the right to live and love. But this right is fluctuating, the exclusions persist and the fights are always present and renewed. The 3D and the virtual universes are potentials, criticisms of our possible worlds. Of our solidary communities. The deconstruction of our westernized bodies leads us to define new links that we had then lost. The bodies are strange and complex. We define ourselves by the representations we have acquired, when scientific progress reveals an inner world far from our education. My work is directly linked to this complexity and to the future possibilities of assuming ourselves always in metamorphosis and fluidity. The virtual is a new theater for all our bodies in transition.

Version Française

“Eromorphosis” (1) Les Âmes en Fleurs” est un film 3D réalisé par l’artiste Valentin Ranger. Ce film nous présente une balade poétique virtuelle dans les murs de la villa Noailles, autour d’une profusion d’installations sculpturales et théâtrales, des métamorphoses célébrant la diversité des corps, l’Amour et la fragilité des fleurs. J’ai eu envie d’échanger avec Valentin sur son film car j’ai été émue par cette œuvre, par sa douceur, sa beauté graphique hybridée, son pouvoir d’enchantement.

Est-ce que tu peux nous présenter ton parcours, ainsi que ton travail plastique ?

Je m’appelle Valentin Ranger, je suis artiste et je travaille actuellement sur Paris. J’ai travaillé dans le théâtre avant de rentrer aux Beaux-Arts de Paris. Mes supports varient entre la 3D, l’installation et le dessin. Mes recherches évoluent à mesure des compréhensions sur le fonctionnement du corps et ses interactions avec son environnement à un niveau quantique et macroscopique, charnel et spirituel. La 3D me permet de construire un écosystème qui célèbre nos mutations, notre fluidité et nos capacités à nous connecter à des nouveaux récits, habités par des interrogations post-humaines et anthropologiques.

Suite à une résidence que tu as effectué à la Villa Noailles au mois de Juin 2020 tu as réalisé le film intitulé « Eromorphosis” (1) Les Âmes en Fleurs ». Comment s’est déroulée la résidence, et la création de ce film ?

Je suis allé à la Villa Noailles pour travailler sur une exposition (Héros/Heroïnes) où j’ai réalisé des dessins. L’exposition était un vrai témoignage de la solidarité et l’amour qui réside à l’intérieur de la Villa Noailles. Pendant cette résidence j’ai pu découvrir une architecture incroyable, mais surtout une équipe solaire, généreuse et très inspirante. C’est un lieu d’une force créatrice immense. La région est magnifique, la végétation luxuriante, tout amenait à la contemplation et au rêve.

Il y a dans ton film une invitation au lâcher-prise, une poésie très réconfortante. Il semble s’inscrire également dans une forme de surréalité. Il y a la présence de Marie-Laure de Noailles, qui fut une soutien du mouvement Surréaliste. Elle apparaît d’ailleurs dans « Les Mystères du Château de Dé » de Man Ray tourné à la Villa Noailles en 1929. La Villa est comme transfigurée dans ton film, baignant dans l’art et la végétation. Comment la figure de Marie-Laure de Noailles et l’architecture de sa villa t’ont aidé à construire des paysages visuels apaisants, riches de beautés et de symboles ? Quel sens est-ce que tu donnes à toutes ces visions ?

L’architecture du lieu, pensée par l’architecte Mallet-Stevens s’inspire fortement d’un navire que j’ai voulu repenser comme un navire volant à travers le cosmos.  J’étais très inspiré par l’influence de Marie Laure sur Dali, Man Ray, Brancusi et Cocteau. Il y a beaucoup d’amour à l’intérieur de ce lieu, une célébration des fleurs à travers les jardins, une tolérance pour les beaux rêves.

C’était l’endroit parfait pour raconter la création de nouvelles formes de corps, lié à notre image puissante et sensible des fleurs, à leur diversité. Je voulais imaginer une nouvelle forme de reproduction poétique et sensuelle, la naissance d’une nouvelle espèce liée de ces nouveaux liens. Concentrée sur la tendresse, vulnérable mais forte.

Tu utilises la modélisation 3D non pas comme un moyen de représentation réaliste mais plutôt comme un prolongement de ton univers plasticien. On le voit avec l’intégration de tes dessins floraux ou encore par exemple avec les laboureurs du cœur qui de par leurs corps, leurs textures évoquent des sculptures vivantes. Est-ce que tu peux nous en dire quelques mots ?

Le dessin est un vrai support pour mon travail, c’est un endroit de liberté qui accueille directement nos instincts et parfois nos fragilités. Il y a une ambivalence qui existe à l’intérieur de ce film où les sculptures ne peuvent pas vivre mais essaient pour autant de délivrer un message d’amour. Les créatures sont protégées de la construction profonde que nous avons de nos représentations du corps. Ces corps sont plutôt des métamorphoses de sentiments et d’affect intérieur. Les sculptures biomorphiques sont remplies de magie, de fantasmagorie, et d’intériorité assumée. Il n’y a pas de règles qui les empêchent d’aimer.

Tu évoques dans une description de ton œuvre une célébration de la diversité des corps. Quelle place tu donnes aux identités Queer dans ton travail en général ?

Grâce aux combats de la communauté Queer contre l’exclusion, de nouveaux corps acquièrent le droit de vie et d’aimer. Mais ce droit est fluctuant, les exclusions persistent et les combats sont toujours présents et renouvelés. La 3D et les univers virtuels sont des potentiels, critiques de nos mondes possibles. De nos communautés solidaires. 

La déconstruction de nos corps occidentalisés nous amène à définir des nouveaux liens que nous avions alors perdus. Les corps sont étranges et complexes. Nous nous définissons par des représentations que nous avons acquises, quand le progrès scientifique nous révèle un monde intérieur loin de notre éducation. Mon travail est lié directement à cette complexité et aux futures possibilités de nous assumer toujours en métamorphose et fluidité. Le virtuel est un nouveau théâtre pour tous nos corps en transition.

Interview by Charline Kirch // Interview par Charline Kirch

A big thank you to Valentin Ranger for this interview. All the images presented in this article are his property.

// Un grand merci à Valentin Ranger pour ses réponses. Toutes les images présentées dans cet article sont sa propriété.

Joint Interview

Creatures of the Virtual Realms

Like the biogeographic realms on the surface of the earth, the virtual realms are also populated with creatures, wonderful life forms. We will discover here through the presentation of ten works a multiplicity of creators’ viewpoints and creative approaches that explore the biological possibilities through virtual technology. From Miri Poppino Kut a raindrop that came to life to fashionista nudibranchs this article will also be for you the opportunity to make amazing encounters !

Sofia Crespo

“How do we engage with the rich diversity of the natural world in virtual, digital space?


This project is part of an ongoing exploration of artificial life using deep learning to generate insects as well as their names and anatomical descriptions. The intention is to celebrate the natural diversity of insectile life, not through the precise, sterile digital reproduction of it, but in the form of new specimens that are digital natives. These do not attempt to impersonate existing insects, but rather embody an insectile “essence” born from the training of machine learning algorithms on datasets of existing insects leading to novel, non-human understandings of the natural. Their diversity and decidedly digital qualities are in complementary contrast to the unsurpassable creativity of natural selection but can act as a prism with which to approach new perspectives and appreciation of the vulnerable, non-human world we too often take for granted.”

Video credit : @soficrespo91 with @entangledothers

Jingxin Wang

“For this piece of art, i attempted to create a trapped creature which interpret the concept of “Xenotransplantation” – the transplantation of living cells, tissues or organs from one species to another. Normally from animal to human. The singular eye is a metaphor of the vicous & selfish observation of human eyes.”

Image credit : @wjx_hasnoenglishname

Nina Muro

“Its name is Miri Poppino Kut. In the initial drafts, it was born from a drop of rain that came to life, so it was set up on a rainy, dark day. However, when creating the image I found that the rain took away from the character itself and it was better to set it up in a neutral environment, so it lost a bit of its origin story. We could say it’s a drop of morning dew that came to life, through a chemical reaction maybe, or perhaps just magic!” 

Image credit : @nninamuro

Konti Chr

“Since we know that the underwater world covers 75% of our world, and 5% discovered.
I am trying to show people they have to look deeper inside and around them to see the connection between everything. I think we are in the age of Aquarians who will pour new water that might have an exciting impact on communication and may even prove to be an opportunity to understand one another better.
 My style somewhat reflects metamorphic aliens in a hardcore way; since these things are a bit mystic, sometimes it’s hard to tell what it is indeed.I am drawing a line between anthropomorphic humans to underwater creatures. I can’t always determine how my work will look from the outside because it just comes from a recently discovered feeling. As I said, I will always be on the journey to find the deep ocean inside me and the others.”

Image credit : @konti_chr

Franco Palioff

“I have been creating creatures in different media since I’m a child. In a certain way, I think these ideas come from what was once a space of meditation, free association, and putting a special power into a thought, thing or creature in my mind, almost like an alchemic child trying to mix science with magic. Deepen into these forms and mechanisms since back then, has made me create robotic objects which I develop in parallel with figurative painting and 3D videos.”

Video credit : @francopalioff

Sukke Xu

“#MoMo/🌙
The inspiration of this piece is came from the social media trending #sailormoonredraw, Sailor Moon is a icon of a girl’s courage, adorable but special and full of mysterious identity symbol. In a cyberpunk world, MoMo/🌙 has the shyness of a girl but the sharpness of a warrior. The tongue of the snake is tempting and deterring. This is probably a very dangerous girl, pls don’t too close.
Momo is the name of my first cat, it’s very interesting that people often say that Momo the cat looks very similar to me, so I created a character image based on our two prototypes. He/she will be braver, crazy, and cuter, #MoMo can do things that Momo the cat and I could not accomplish in the parallel world.”

Image credit : @ssuukk_ee

Gunkspore

“With this piece, I wanted to depict a putrid & slimy creature, born to protect the path of a river leading to places currently unknown (& yet to be revealed) within the GunkVerse. Each piece I make is a bit more context to the world in which all of my characters live, & the expansion of that world is what drives me to wake up every morning & continue creating it.”

Image credit : @gunkspore

Sargon Khinoev

“I was meditating about organic and inorganic surfaces as well as aliens and xeno creatures in general, which are usually shown as something dangerous. In my opinion strange creatures are something lovely and inspiring. This was the idea behind this work: To find peace and freedom we need to accept and include the unknown.”

Image credit : @ssssskkkkkddddd

Sarah Ann Banks

“This image was inspired by tiny creatures called nudibranchs! They are sea slugs covered in bright colors, patterns, and textures. Lots of wiggly neon tentacles and polka dots. These two in the scene are alternate world fashionista nudibranchs, out on the town in their trendy outfits.

I had to make two together of course to show the unified effort to look cool and cute. I’m always inspired by nature and science and love to throw in modern elements to give the work some sense of relatability to myself and the world around me. I’m always working towards creating a dialogue between all my creations that sits somewhere between sci-fi and camp. This image to me connects what I often try to explore with my work; current trends, things I find interesting, and things that just make me laugh.”

Image credit : @ssarahbankss

Giusy Amoroso

“Nature itself is nothing else then a technology that may have been created for us; to mold us into the form and the physical shape that we are in. My artworks are fueled by the philosophical and enlightening idea that one can reach a higher form and free mind and body by creating something detached from the known. The possibility of reprogramming ourselves on a quantum level, additionally fuels the idea that our creator or creators have constructed this world for us. Equally we have the power to create worlds, creatures and entities, even identities and selves in the digital multiverse.”

Image credit : @marigoldff x @exitsimulation

Interview by Charline Kirch

Featured image credit : Nudibranchs by Sarah Ann Banks

A huge thank you to the creators who gave me some of their precious time to contribute to this article !

Whole New Worlds

25 names of artistic movements you would like to see emerge in the coming years.

A few days ago, I asked my followers in a GI story to suggest imaginary names for art movements they would like to see emerge in the coming years. Having received many beautiful answers, I have chosen to share 25 of them in this article!

Moreover, I suggest to continue this speculative activity to all creators who recognize themselves in these names by using them as hashtags to define their artistic works.

N.E.S.T (Nature-Empowered StoryTelling)

Intuitive unlearned expression

Art Terraforming : When a large place is repurposed by all types of art and installations

Fleurisme

Britneyism

Holographic existentialists

Eco horror

Futur-church

Inter-Dimensional Surrealism

HydroFluid

Dental romanticism

After renaissance rebirth

Aquatic mutation with its new habitat, emergence of new skins

Digital Arte Povera

Vibro-Empathic Holotesselationism

Symbiocenist

Nonexistencialism. The art of existing as little as possible

Experimental fauna genre paintings

Hornynism

Intergalactic Fashion Union

Alienation

Post plague paintings

Accelerationism and anti-accelerationism

Metamorphism

Healing vibes manifest

I would like to thank all the people who participated in this exercise and Alix Desaubliaux, without whom I wouldn’t have had the idea to do it !

Image credit : Annihilation, 2018, by Alex Garland

Fashion

🌳 IN MY DISTOPIC GARDEN 🌲 Carla Boré Collection Spring/Summer 21

It is often said that clothes are supposed to reflect who we are inside. What Carla Boré‘s Spring/Summer 2021 collection reflects is a rich and wild inner life. Where joy finds its source in the experimentation of shapes, textures and colors, where creativity opens a gate to new worlds.

Organic, strange and oniric new worlds, which are walked through by women who have preferred, in a nose-thumbing to fatalism, a smiling evasion to a cowardly escape. The dressed silhouettes of these women are vaporous, mutant, oversized, asymmetrical and draped. They embody a rebirth of nature, a supernatural rebirth.

LOOK 01
ACID RAIN
NYLON MULTI DRAWSTRINGS
VAPOROUS DRESS,
ASYMETRICAL HOOD

MODEL BAMBI MIST

LOOK 06
TERRA GARDENER
TURTLE NECK-GLOVES IN SOFT LYCRA,
TOP WITH CUTTINGS-OFF AND WAVY YOKES IN LYCRA AND SOFT KNIT,
DRAPED SATIN MIDI LENGH SKIRT
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 07
LATEX ARTISANAL «EYE» BRA
LATEX PAINTING BRA,

ORGANIC MULTI-DRAWSTRING GIANT
VOLUME TROUSERS
MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 01
ACID RAIN
NYLON MULTI DRAWSTRINGS
VAPOROUS DRESS,
ASYMETRICAL HOOD

MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 05
POISONED LAKE OVERSIZE COAT
LIGHT NYLON OVERSIZE KWAY WITH LAYERING
AND ARTISANAL LATEX PAINTING LEATHER-LIKE,
DRAWSTRING DOUBLE-LAYER SKIRT WITH LATEX
DIGITAL PRINT

MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 06 ET 7
«MAN RAY»
ORGANIC LATEX DRAPING
SQUARE TOE SHOE

MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 06
TERRA GARDENER
TURTLE NECK-GLOVES IN SOFT
LYCRA, TOP WITH CUTTINGS-OFF
AND WAVY YOKES IN LYCRA AND
SOFT KNIT, DRAPED SATIN MIDI
LENGH SKIRT

MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 01
ACID RAIN
MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 05
ARID POISONED LAKE
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 01
ACID RAIN
DRAWSTRING PUFFY DRESS
AND TIGHTS
SHOE SQUARE TOE
MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 05
POISONED LAKE
FOCUS ON KWAY
ELONGATED CAPE
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
ORGANIC FLOWER BULB – DISTORDIA FIELDS PRINT
LIGHT GOLD YELLOW
MULTI DRAWSTRING
ASYMETRICAL DRESS

SILK JUPON,
TOTAL COVERING

CATSUIT AND HOOD
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
DISTORDIA FIELDS PRINT
ORGANIC FLOWER BULB –
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 04
IN MUTATION GARDEN PRINT
PINK BLOUSE IN THIN SILK,
THREADY EMBROIDERY WET WITH LATEX

MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 02
MAGIC ORGANIC BAG
CERAMIC AND RESIN HAND BAG,
RE-USED THREADS EMBROIDERY
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
DISTORDIA FIELDS PRINT
ORGANIC FLOWER BULB,
MAGIC CERAMIC AND RESIN BAG

MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 04
MODEL BAMBI MIST
LOOK 02
DISTORDIA FIELDS PRINT
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
MAGIC ORGANIC BAG
CERAMIC AND RESIN HAND BAG,
RE-USED THREADS EMBROIDERY

MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
DISTORDIA FOREST
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 02
MAGIC BAG
CERAMIC AND RESIN AND RE-USED TEXTILES
MODEL MENG JI
LOOK 07
ONIRIC WORLD
MODEL BAMBI MIST

“As a strong desire to reconnect with nature, to celebrate it as an ode. I have been captivated by these surfaces, these forms, these textures that can be found in the wild organic world. I began to study its distorted movements, its life cycle, as well as some biological phases such as morphogenesis or mutation.
The nature I explore is mystical, strange, decadent and subversive. It overwhelms my universe through a dazzling surnatural mystic prism of colors that amazes, or that can be disturbing by its strange side.
My universe is found between fiction, dream, and realism. In my story the vegetal world that we know would have mutated one evening under an acid rain, to face the increasingly harsh world that surrounds it.
A woman wakes up one night in this poisonous garden where nature would have regained its rights. She is very trouble and confused. Her body has changed, and the surface of her skin is different. Disturbed, she begins a rebirth in this world where a whole other nature, wild and half surnatural, would have survived and would have come to accompany her in this phase.

Although my collection is called In my Dystopic Garden, I tell here an optimistic, off beat, and brightened vision, an air of «I don’t give a fuck», with a desire to make fun of a society that is more and more depressed. For at least, if there were to happen an apocalypse, at least would there be a second life, or perhaps even a re-birth ?

This collection leads us to reconnect with the fragility but also the strength and beauty of the bond we forge with this vegetal world. It is a matter of expressing as a strong desire to protect him but also to come and celebrate his intriguing beauty. Moreover it generate a climate of introspection and intimacy, aiming to reconnect with our inner world. As an artist, I seek to integrate the human belonging to the universe, a system we are part of but we seem unaware of. We can achieve to this reconnection through exploration, by seeking beauty and atypicalness in this world around us. Like an explorer going on a new journey, as a quest toward the essentials but above all : astonishment, and the audacity to believe in a more attractive future.” Carla Boré.

PHOTOGRAPH VALENTIN FABRE
STYLIST CARLA BORE
MODELS BAMBI MIST, MENG JI
HAIR AND MAKE UP LILLY LIZE
ASSISTANTS MERYL MOLINIER, HUGO PIONNIE

Joint Interview

Humanimality

In recent times my attention has often been focused on works that seem to converge, each in its own way, towards a point where humanity and animality cease to be perceived in a contradictory manner.

These works have a lot to say, whether it is about our cohabitation with nature, or about our identities and the links they have with our bodies.

To feed this reflection I asked three artistsAnthr0morph, Anni Puolakka and Omenmalumhow they articulate the relationship between humanity and animality in their work.

Anthr0morph

“I like to blur the lines between human and animal and reflect how biology is interconnected. We all evolved from each other and in a way are different forms of the same thing. Our DNA holds the history of so many other forms. I see the faces I create as some type of self designed exoskeleton. An exoskeleton gives shape and abilities to a body. By becoming a chimera, I explore these other types of embodiments that reflect the evolve potential of forms someone can take.”

Anni Puolakka

“In my view, humans are animals. My work reflects, amongst other issues, the need for changes in how we live amongst other species.

One of my recent projects, Oestrus, considers becoming a centaur as a way to love horses. It tells the story of a “horse girl” who has grown up to be an adult who couldn’t imagine mounting a horse. The character has physically distanced themself from horses and engages with them through fantasies of hippic transformation.”

Omenmalum

“We are a single living organism, man is a rational creature, thinking, but sometimes you need to feel and understand that an animal is sleeping in each of us. and I give the opportunity not only to others, but first of all to myself, sometimes to release this animal outside, aesthetically, according to the connections of art, sensually, beautifully and eerily at the same time.”

Interview by Charline Kirch

Featured image credits : Oestrus by Anni Puolakka at the Polansky Gallery, Prague. Photo by Jan Kolský.

Playlist

Fall Stories

Celebrating our last escapes into the woods, warming from the last rays of sunshine shining on the yellow leaves, feeling the dreariness that will come to turn the world off, waiting for the future snows in front of rocks that are getting darker and darker, and contemplating our aging skins that are turning into cliffs. This playlist tells something about those some fall images.

Image credit : @s_a_mayer

Storytelling

The recipe of the bird with a silver beak

I)

On a rainy day, bury in eggshells under five doses of wax and three of cement, your tears of fatigue.

II)

Let it fossilize over a low heat for a few years.

III)

Draw the path to your destination with your fossils and then devour it with your eyes.

IV)

Let it digest in a large grey rock while you learn to let go.

V)

Listen to the wisdom emanating from the underground song of the beak of prehistoric automatons and study it.

VI)

Cut out your mistakes with a lyre and tame them like knucklebones.

VII)

Remove them from your spine which you will expose to the rain.

VIII)

Watch your wet skeleton become more pointed, with steel hooks to catch invisible treasures.

IX)

Contemplate your new animality and put it on feathered heels that will take you as high as your wings.

X)

Embrace your new powers with humility and take flight over the path you had drawn.

XI)

And when your claws have grown enough, you will take time to share your experience on a silvery stained-glass.

———-

Text by Charline Kirch for Expo156

Image credit : Archaeopteryx lithographica (fossil bird) by James St. John

Editorial

The Usurpers

The Usurpers

Premiere on Expo156:
«The Usurpers», by @kristallikova
___
It is about an extraterrestrial family, where children seize power over their parents. Main visual feature is similarity of each of the five characters with terrestrial animals.
___
Team credits: (art/)director&keymua @kristallikova

producer @ahhtosya

video operators @paveilone @nezrimvadim

photographer @culttv

style @modefashion04

production designer @diarikrist
video editor @whvgi

light @nezrimvadim

makeup @smsh.makeup @sonyaulyanovaa @ulielolle @baarwel inspired by @thundergirl_xtal

music «Go away» by @cardinal_and_nun

sisters-hedgehogs @sexyurbann @plinchos

brother-rabbit @viovokum

father-eagle @naiwell

mother-snake @dolfiinspace

error: <3