This painting evokes a memory of the artist from one of her first trips in France, to a destination so dear to the hearts of “Night Liberty Fishermen (#14)”
Genres
Bridal Veil / It Rains in Brittany (#11)
Creating this piece, I tapped into the essence of surrealism to weave a tale of the unexpected. It’s a dance between the real and the “Bridal Veil / It Rains in Brittany (#11)”
Celestial Fish (#12)
The magical atmosphere of a party in a port in Brittany. The natural elements come alive and join the dance of the sailors who returned “Celestial Fish (#12)”
Huang He. Riverbanks (#9)
An old man walks next to a loaded cart, pulled by a donkey, by the Yellow River in the light of the sunset. Wherever this “Huang He. Riverbanks (#9)”
Nest (#10)
One of my cousins, Michel, once told me that the city of Saint-Malo was like a corsair’s nest. A nest city, an amusing picture, and “Nest (#10)”
Cup of Green Tea at the Moon Festival (#7)
One-of-a-kind extra-large tempera painting on canvas. It is covered with a glossy varnish for the brightness of colours and the preservation of painting for many “Cup of Green Tea at the Moon Festival (#7)”
Chickadee (#8)
Another memory of China which keeps attracting me so much for the beauty of its culture and for its paradoxical contrasts, inexplicable to the eye “Chickadee (#8)”
Yellow River (#5)
When I arrived in 2009 in Lanzhou, a large city located right in the middle of China, I was struck by the strong presence of “Yellow River (#5)”
Fight (#6)
In this tempera painting, I’ve melded the figurative with surrealism, capturing the essence of a dreamlike celebration. Cradled within tender hands, the tea cup becomes “Fight (#6)”
Under the Branches of a Willow (#4)
This work is an opportunity to play with the different plans and scales of representation in order to create a metaphorical space out of time. “Under the Branches of a Willow (#4)”
