The gallery offers a real provocation that is very hard to imagine in any other venue. For the public, the season opens with this beautiful and curious icing on the gallery's birthday cake: Michel Blazy and his Le Grand Restaurant. Blazy is an atypical artist who was first noted in a solo show at the Palais de Tokyo. He proposes a global and original work that packs a high-quality paradoxical wallop. The metaphor of food and its decomposition — the everyday victuals that have nurtured his painting and sculpture for so many years — has now evolved towards anthropology. The bizarreness of his sumptuous mold-covered spaces, where traces of food were mostly transformed into drawings and unexpected matter, now not only decorates the exhibition space but truly manifests the incredible capacity of living matter to generate food that is much more than molecular.


The show's high point is the organically textured cave reminiscent of "pan brioche and the Bomarzo garden

The public consumes and works at Bar a orange. A calculated wall drawing à la Sol Lewitt is made from squeezed oranges and the ordered accumulation of residual shells on trays and wall brackets. Fermentation generates drosophila flies and attracts spiders and other insects. Everything is calculated like the most rigorous conceptual art.



