SAINT-LOUIS-LÈS-BITCHE.- With the exhibition Toute la beauté du monde (All the Beauty of the World), the Fondation dentreprise Hermès continues its mission of supporting contemporary creation. Léa Barbazanges, who lives and works in Strasbourg, presents about fifteen new works made from plant-, mineral- and animal-based materials and textures in the exhibition space of the Musée Saint-Louis.
Conceived as both a visual and sensorial experience curated by Estelle Pietrzyk, curator and chief heritage curator at the Musée dArt Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg (MAMCS), the exhibition appeals just as much to the eye as to the desire to touch.
Polymorphic, it reads like a snapshot of Léa Barbazangess work, where the different realms of life intertwine. Playing with variations between empty and full, visible and imperceptible, the artist crafts works that invite us to slow down our gaze and pay attention to that which typically escapes the eye.
The materials she choosesalgae, spider silk, organic membranes, minerals are discreet, often inconspicuous. Through careful observation and patient handiwork they are transformed and magnified, revealing unexpected beauty. Some works evoke delicate tapestries, while others reveal patterns inspired by animal molts or natural microstructures, giving rise to a fragile and poetic world.
For the first time, the artist presents a collection of pieces dedicated to diatoms microalgae invisible to the naked eye, yet essential to the planets balance. Through a monumental form set in motion, she reveals their intricate architecture and complexity. The exhibition is punctuated by a line of micaa naturally iridescent mineralspanning several metres. Its vibrant, iridescent surface celebrates an unstable and elusive beauty. This unique immersive project is enhanced by a sound composition by musician Christine Ott, a specialist in ondes Martenot, inviting visitors on a sensory journey through the living world.
Since its creation, the Fondation dentreprise Hermès has provided ongoing support for the visual arts in its four exhibition spaces dedicated to contemporary creation: La Verrière in Brussels (Belgium), Le Forum in Tokyo (Japan), Atelier Hermès in Seoul (South Korea) and, since 2014, La Grande Place, Musée Saint-Louis in Saint-Louis lès-Bitche (France). Seen through the lens of craftsmanship, the exhibitions at La Grand Place, Musée Saint-Louis are conceived in cycles in collaboration between the local cultural institutions and the Cristallerie Saint-Louis. After four successful seasons in partnership with the Centre Pompidou-Metz, the 49 Nord 6 Est Frac Lorraine (Metz), the Centre dArt Contemporain La Synagogue de Delme and the Centre dart Vente des Forêts, the Foundation has now entrusted its programming to the Musée dArt Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg (MAMCS) for four exhibitions from 2025 to 2027. Through this cycle, Estelle Pietrzyk, chief curator at the MAMCS, highlights artists whose practices are rooted in a rich local artistic environment.
Born in Rennes in 1985, Léa Barbazanges graduated from the Haute École des Arts du Rhin (HEAR). Attentive to things of nature, she develops a body of work that incorporates crystals, algae, spider silk, and more, to reveal their beauty.
Léa Barbazanges observes nature like no other, detecting micro and macroscopic landscapes that she reveals in her installations. The elements she selects are presented with infinite respect, her approach neither constraining nor exaggerating an arrangement that is already wonderful in its natural state.
With Léa Barbazanges, insect wings, plantain seeds and mica sheetsso delicate and fragile, yet so rich in form, function, and meaningbecome the starting point for a spatial construction. Building from organic materials is one of the focal points of the artists unique work, which she sometimes designs with the advice of scientists.
Her work is part of several public and private collections (Fondation Bullukian in Lyon, Frac Alsace, Musée dArt Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg, Musée Ziem in Martigues the latter of which presented a solo exhibition of hers in 2022). Selected for the programme Arts and Sciences of the Diagonale Paris-Saclay in 2018, she also was shortlisted that same year to create stained glass windows for a chapel in the Chartres cathedral. Her work has been presented in various group exhibitions including Sensations et impressions on the occasion of the 150th anniversary of Impressionism celebrated by the Musée dOrsay and the Musée dArt Moderne et Contemporain de Strasbourg in 2024; Phenomena at the Stadtmuseum in Bad Dürkheim (Germany) in 2024; Experience #16, Rêveries at the Domaine Pommery in Reims in 2023; Le Serpent cosmique at the Musée de lHospice Comtesse; Utopia in Lille3000 in 2022. Her work has also been featured in solo presentations, including an exhibition at the Domaine de Kerguéhennec in Bignan in 2022 and À la lisière du visible at the Musée Ziem in Martigues in 2021.