Alarme

Collages, calligraphy and grids in a retrospective of the late Beat painter Brion Gysin’s work

by Isabelle Doal

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The work of British-Canadian artist Brion Gysin, defined by techniques like mixed collages, systematic repetition and “cut-up” (a method he invented), is experiencing somewhat of a revival since his death in 1986. A stream of contemporary artists have recently taken interest in the artist and the newly-opened “Alarme” exhibition at Paris’ Galerie de France illustrates the scope of his oeuvre, following two recent important exhibitions of his contributions.

The Pompidou showed a film, jointly produced by Gysin, William Burroughs (the two were good friends) and Antony Balch, demonstrating “semi-conscious states and trances,” while his work on sound-collages, a medium he conceived with his former NYC studiomate Ramuntcho Matta, was featured in a group show on the topic at Galerie Anne Barraulthe.

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Gysin’s based his works on crossings, formally represented by the constant use of grid patterns. Most of the time he employed a rudimentary printing technique, rolling a paintbrush on a paper sheet over a canvas of wire threads, consistently incorporating script letters and photos into the grids.

Both poet and painter, and part of the Beat Generation, Gysin has always played with words and letters as graphic materials. He arrived in New York during World War II and started experimenting with literature and various kinds of writing experiences. He created “permutation poems,” repeating a single sentence several times with the words rearranged in different orders so that each reiteration is a new discovery, for example “I don’t dig work, man/Man, work I don’t dig.” Many of these variations he derived using a random sequence and was inspired by free verse, but several also followed a mathematical structure.

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The cut-up technique was used by writers such as John Dos Passos and laid the foundation for “Naked Lunch.” “Alarme” shows a couple of artworks featuring pieces of text from the pivotal novel, using letters as signs on small square water-colored papers, created by rolling paintbrushes on metallic grids.

A couple of panels show the four-year-long construction of the Pompidou through a photographic series consisting of vertical stripes stuck together. Small square photos from contact sheets act as grids, one by one incorporated into inked columns reminiscent of skyscrapers.

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Completing the overview, a series of ink-painted letters in Asian and Arabic scripts speak to Gysin’s devotion to painting and drawing. The artist, who spoke Japanese and Arabic, played with the opposition between the Japanese vertical script and horizontal Arabic writing with an interest in painting these figures to make crossings and grids.

“Alarme” runs through 2 April 2010 at Galerie de France.


Paris in 2000 images

Un beau travail en vidéo time-lapse présentant la ville et les monuments de Paris. Intitulée “Le Flâneur” en technique stop-motion, cette séquence est composée de 2000 photographies par l’étudiant américain Luke Shepard. Une captation avec le Nikon D90 sur une bande son de The XX.



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Gaelle Faure

A Parisian artist channels her passion for natural history and evoking the past with a series of unearthly collages

by Isabelle Doal

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An archaeologist-turned-anthropologist-turned-artist, Parisian Gaelle Faure uses collage to tell her own version of history. She forages flea markets for antiques and second-hand items, such as old photographs, dolls, dried butterflies and other hidden treasures, which she combines with anonymous letters, postcards and diary entries from old journals in order to give the past new life. Formerly specializing in funeral rituals, Faure’s interest in evoking memories by resurrecting forgotten stories seems a natural fit for the curious creative.

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The daughter of sculptors, Faure discovered a passion for uncovering the past through her grandfather, a scientist who used to collect skulls, bones and old academic medical books.

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Through a combination of thoughtfully-positioned artifacts placed in frames, her anachronistic microcosms reflect her overall sense of humor. For example she illustrates the literal translation of “rack your brain” which in French translates to “to dig one’s head” with a series of headless images culled from a 20th century magazines.

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Faure is currently working on the re-construction of an old photo album, which she found in a flea market. The photographs are taken from the album, scanned and scrambled into a humorous picture, to create what she calls “a poetic omelet.”

Her interest in found objects also extends to furniture like lamps and chairs, which she customizes and sells upon request.

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Hellohikimori

Hellohikimori

All kinds of cool things to watch, really nice site too.

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Où est Charlie

Une mise en scène décalée dans des lieux à Paris du célèbre personnage issue de “Où est Charlie”. Une ré-interprétation dans le monde réel par le duo de photographe Max et Charlotte après leur formation aux Gobelins. Un univers photographique rempli d’imaginations et de détails.



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Live The Language – Paris

Magnifica serie di spot per EF Language Schools diretta da Gustav Johansson. In questa serie di video dedicati alla città di Parigi, Londra, Beijing, si gioca sul parallelismo tra immagine e tipografia. Tutti gli altri video li trovate qui su Fubiz.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

Melbourne practice March Studio have trapped 4500 cardboard boxes behind netting in this store for Australian skincare brand Aesop.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

Located within Parisian concept store Merci, the installation uses the brand’s own packaging in an undulating installation that rises up one wall and spreads across the ceiling.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

See also: Aesop store in Singapore by March Studio.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

More retail design on Dezeen »

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

Photographs are by Louise Baquiast.

The following information is from Aesop:


merci is housing the Australian cosmetics brand Aesop for a spectacular installation in the Orangerie from 18th of December.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

For merci, Aesop founder Dennis Paphitis challenged Australian architect Rodney Eggleston to imagine an original installation for the space. The project is emblematic of Eggleston’s play on repetition and the elevation of everyday objects from commonplace to statement.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

Rodney Eggleston, founder of March Studio, is an Australian architect of 29 years who lives and works in Melbourne. He began his career with Rem Koolhas and has worked in partnership with Aesop for 7 of the brand’s signature stores, most recently Aesop Saint-Honoré, which opened in September at 256, rue Saint-Honoré, Paris.

Aesop at Merci by March Studio

The installation consists of 4500 cardboard shippers and 40m2 of netting.


See also:

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Aesop store by
March Studio
Aesop Aoyama by Schemata Architecture OfficeAesop store by
Studio Ilse

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

French photographer Julien Lanoo has sent us some images of this extension to a house in Paris by French studio Bang Architectes.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Called Heliotrope Raising, the project involved topping an existing house with this glazed wooden-framed structure.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Situated on a narrow plot of land, the original house was too small in size and overlooked by neighbouring buildings, meaning a limited amount of light entered the space.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

The architects have extended the house vertically, adding two extra floors and creating a new living space at the very top, which is bathed in natural light.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Photographs are copyright Julien Lanoo.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

See all our stories on residential extensions in our Dezeen archive.

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Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Here’s some more information from the architects:


HELIOTROPE RAISING

Initially, there is a modest little house, totalizing an area of 60 m² on two levels, situated in a backyard plot, in a very narrow area of the 20th district of Paris. Enclosed and humid because of the presence of an underground aqueduct, the house is plunged into darkness as the buildings nearby and especially a 20m high wall cover any chance of light.

Beyond the obvious need to increase the family’s living space, there is also a true a desire to gain light and visual clearance.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

The search for light is what guides the design of the project until the genesis of an “heliotropist” architecture. It is therefore necessary to gain height over the old construction up to the maximum volume of capacity, limits of urban regulations, and budget. Naturally, the center of gravity of the new dwelling, that is to say the living rooms, finds its place on the top floor.

The access to the site through a 90cm wide corridor and the structural weakness of the existing building makes us opt for a lightweight wooden structure wich can easily be manipulated. On the wide length of the house, side yard, the existing walls are so fragile that, as a precaution, large “stilts” in glulam will span them.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

On the newly created floors, on all open sides, the skeleton of the wood frame wall will be exhibited. Structural elements will be displayed every 80 cm, combined with a filling of a full height volume of glass for maximum natural light.

Structural glued laminated Douglas, extended and narrowed asymmetrically draws a regular vertical grid which acts as a sunshade and opposes a kind of three-dimensional filter to vis-à-vis. This principle applied consistently unifies the created volume and gives it a clear expression, despite its modest size, in a dominant and diverse site. Finally, this technique removes the problem of façade composition on such a small volume.

Heliotrope Raising by Bang Architectes

Internally, the house is organized around a central space occupied by the staircase beneath a canopy angle (regulation impact of a prospect of a neighboring building). The hopper, in decreasing width, lets the light descend from the canopy to the DRC. A small south-facing terrace on the 3rd floor benefits directly from the sun and the view over the colorful roofs of the neighborhood. In the new part of the house, partitioning is voluntarily minimized. The facades are left free to all partitions or doors; we flow along to enter the bathroom or walking closet.

Program: adding levels and renovating a house for a couple and two children
Location: rue de la Mare, Paris 20ème
Total net floor area: 170 m²
Creates net floor area: 98 m²
Total cost: 270 K € (all taxes included)
Client: Private
Project manager: Bang Architects (Nicolas and Nicolas Gaudard Hugoo)
Start of study: February 2009
Delivery: October 2010

Construction system:

  • structural and facade: glued laminated douglas (untreated)
  • floors and roof: pine wood panels (OSB)
  • external wall: wooden frame wall + larch cladding
  • insulation: 12 cm wood wool
  • window frames: aluminum thermal break with double-glazing 6/16/6, argon, low emissivity
  • covering: self-protected tar

Environmental approach:

  • compact volume
  • thermal insulation quality: wood wool on 12 cm
  • no thermal bridges through “all wood”
  • structural elements acting as shading in summer
  • Low emissivity glass
  • window frames with thermal bridges break
  • natural light from all parts (except toilets) to reduce energy consumption
  • healthy materials: wood, linoleum, wood wool, etc..

See also:

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Vol House by
Estudio BaBO
Origami by
Architects Collective
51A Gloucester Crescent by John Glew

Hèrmes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

French architects RDAI have completed this new Paris boutique for fashion brand Hermès inside a 1930s swimming pool building.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Hèrmes Rive Gauche features three nine-metre high wooden pavilions made of ash laths, each housing the Hèrmes collections.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

A fourth wooden structure lines the staircase leading visitors from the entrance into the former pool.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The floor of the pool area is covered with mosaic tiles.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Photographs are by Michel Denancé unless otherwise stated.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Here are some more details from Hèrmes:


Hermès has entrusted the RDAI agency, which is reponsible for designing all the Hermès stores worldwide, with the design of a new space, singular and unexpected in Paris. Hermès is setting up shop in a swimming pool… An immense volume, empty. An impression more of space than of surface area. And now, at the end of a project that added but did not take away, the Lutétia swimming pool, in the heart of the Saint-Germain- des-Prés quarter of Paris, has metamorphosed into the first Hermès boutique on the Left Bank.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The architectural project led by Denis Montel and the teams at RDAI mixes contrasts and complementarities. It was imagined more in terms of volume than surface area, in m3 more than in m2. In the end, it is an intervention both radical and astonishingly gentle.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Listed as a Historic Monument since 2005, the swimming pool built in 1935 has a strong architectonic character and a compelling identity, that of Art Deco – it is in the spirit of its age. After its closure, the swimming pool underwent varied and diverse uses and was transformed. The challenge was to translate some of the values intrinsic to Hermès into space: heritage and modernity, savoir-faire and creation.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The project has a double aim. First of all to respect, conserve and reinterpret the architecture of the swimming pool.The only important modification was the covering of the pool by means of concrete composite floor slab supported by a light structure. Underneath, the pool has been integrally preserved. The facade, giving onto the rue de Sèvres, has kept its original appearance.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Then, to tell another story, one that is resolutely contemporary.This takes form through the appearance of three monumental ash huts which both disrupt the existing volumes and converse with them.The invasion of what was once the pool by these huts, flexible, light and nomadic, suggests the creation of houses within the house.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

A change of scale, an invitation to wander, to drift, which produces a powerful magic… Everywhere the movements seem natural, they are fluid, rippling.The shimmering of the water that was once here is evoked in a subtle way in the tones of the mosaics, in the effects of the lights… What existed and what has been added converse in a strange harmony. They are whole, they are complementary.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The Entrance

At the foot of an elegant apartment building from the mid 1930s, the facade of the Hermès store is discreet.An entrance portico in the centre between two windows, nothing to hint at the surprise awaiting once through the doors…

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The entrance is like a lightwell overturned, horizontal, which attracts one irrevocably towards the light at the back, towards what was the Lutétia swimming pool.The entrance to the store must function like a delicious trap into which the visitor lets himself slide, from crossing the threshold of the doors on the street until he reaches the swimming pool and its strange inhabitants, the huts.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

To guide him, the perspectives are accentuated and modified by an imperceptible contraction, rather like the sides of the Médicis fountain in the Luxembourg garden. The lightly inclined ceiling, the walls curved and leaning inwards, covered with oak laths that leave recesses open as if floating in matter. An introduction full of mysteries inciting one to plunge into this new Hermès house.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The Huts

Four pavilions with an organic design, in which some will recognise familiar forms from the plant or animal world, or from childhood… Others will liken these huts, which occupy the volume of the swimming pool, to the nests of tisserin birds.These pavilions of different form and dimensions are constructed in ash wood. They are self-supporting structures that rest on a system of woven wooden laths (profile 6×4cm) with a double radius of curves. The documentation and three-dimensional drawing of the complex geometry of each hut was made possible by the computer script written for each one of them.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Rising to more than 9 m in height, they lean progressively, as if attracted by the skylights. The huts house the Hermès collections. They seem to have simply alighted on the ground, lending the project its nomadic dimension.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The fourth hut, which appears to be lying down, lines the staircase that naturally leads the visitor towards the pool and forms the link between the entrance and the open space of the swimming pool.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

The Lighting

In such a volume, the lighting is crucial. The entire space is bathed in natural light that penetrates through the three large skylights above the atrium, softened only by a metal screen. At night the skylights are lit to avoid a “black hole” effect.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

In order to avoid putting the spaces overlooking the pool that previously housed the changing rooms, in the shade, the effects had to be measured out, the contrasts that would otherwise have been too harsh attenuated. All the vertical panels are therefore also lightly illuminated.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Above photograph is by Bruno Clergue

The undulating walls in white plaster, running around the ground floor, are lit from above by LED tape with the light source hidden from view.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Above photograph is by Bruno Clergue

Lit from the interior, the huts appear as giant lanterns. A lighting device embedded in the floor, illuminates their vaults of latticed wood.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Each hut has a large chandelier composed of a double ring of suspended wood.The shelving is lit by integrated and invisible LED tape.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Above photograph is by Bruno Clergue

The Mosaics

The Lutétia swimming pool is a mineral world. The floors, the columns, the staircases are covered in mosaics, broken tiles or granito. The existing ornamental elements on the floor and the walls have been preserved and restored.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Through the play of this transformation, this world has discovered several new forms of expression…

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Above photograph is by Bruno Clergue

In the entrance to the store, a mosaic carpet with a Greek motif (a nod to the flooring of the Hermès store at 24 Faubourg Saint-Honoré) welcomes visitors. Following this desire for coherence, the steps and risers of the large newly created staircase are in granito.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

Adding to this refinement, the floors of rooms less visible to visitors (such as the fitting rooms, the bathrooms) have been worked in broken tiles. It is a means of writing these new spaces into the history of the swimming pool. The surface of the pool is adorned with a mosaic covering, whose texture and composition of ceramic and glass mosaic tiles evoke the movement of waves. Shiny and matt tesserae in different dimensions and in multiple colours and white gold seem to vibrate as one moves around. A random approach to the composition in graduated tones creates effects of depth and sparkle accentuated by the play of light.

Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Hermes Rive Gauche by RDAI

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Mulberry store by
Universal Design Studio
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Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

This narrow staircase with alternating steps is one of a pair installed by French studio MAAJ Architectes in a Parisian apartment.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Facing each other, the staircases each lead up to a different bedroom.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

The treads and risers have been painted black, contrasting with the predominantly white interior.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Panels on the side of the central staircase hide storage spaces within.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

See all our stories featuring staircases in our Dezeen archive »

Here’s a bit of information supplied by the architects (in French):


Petit appartement parisien en duplex, le projet s’organise en respectant les dimensions réduites de l’espace. Dimensionner, multiplier les fonctions dans un élément, éclairer, simplifier sont les thèmes qui ont dicté notre intervention. Le projet réhabilite la double orientation Est /Ouest nécessaire pour un éclairage naturel constant et diffus, agrandissant l’espace.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Restituer la double orientation démontre que par des mesures simples, un espace peut s’en retrouver complètement transformé par la lumière. L’essentiel du projet redonne accès aux combles afin d’y installer deux chambres. Dans cette espace en double hauteur, un jeu de pistons forme deux escaliers à pas décalés composé de rangements.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Les blocs se juxtaposent, s’emboîtent et s’encastrent afin de regrouper les fonctions nécessaires à chaque pièce (HI-FI, TV, Bibliothèque, penderie…). Regrouper les usages était essentiel pour éviter de réduire l’espace.

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Fiche technique

Architectes : Anne-Julie Martinon et Marc-Antoine Richard (MAAJ Architectes)
Localisation : 36, rue Pradier / Paris 19e
Année de réalisation : 2010
Durée des études : 3 mois

Paris apartment by MAAJ Architectes

Durée des travaux : 3 mois
Surfaces : 43m² carrez / 71m² au sol (41m² au niveau bas et 30 m² à l’étage sous combles) / soit 57 m² pondéré.
Coût des travaux : 30 233 euros HT hors honoraires architecte


See also:

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Loft Access by
Tamir Addadi Architecture
Origami Stair by
Bell Phillips
Santpere47 by
Miel Arquitectos