Lauzerte. Successful opening at the Art Points de vue gallery

Lauzerte. Successful opening at the Art Points de vue gallery
Lauzerte. Successful opening at the Art Points de vue gallery

The public attended in large numbers last Saturday the second opening of the season at the Art Points de vue gallery.

In the elegant room overlooking the Barbican esplanade, four artists had the privilege of presenting their works before the official opening of the exhibition.

Cécile Beaupère de Vourey (38) explains: “My painting is a story of meeting people who are not at my service but work with me on our respective fragilities and accept to be shaken up by this creative adventure.” She graduated from the Higher School of Art and Design in Le Havre (Seine-Maritime).

Jean-Louis Roux, cultural journalist specializing in literary and artistic criticism, says of her artistic research: “For always, again and again, she draws the body. The body again. Always, ceaselessly, obstinately. As if life in depended. And perhaps it does, indeed.”

Corinne Landreau, pyroplastic artist from Albi (Tarn), immerses us in the twists and turns of her hollowed and burned wood paintings, drawing us into her obsessive and hypnotic gesture.

A sculptor for around forty years, Jean-Patrick Magnoac has been working for several years on a new medium called “La Trame” which allows the meeting of two traditions, sculptural and pictorial, since it is made up of a plasticized support which lets the light and on which the artist draws then paints. First Camille Claudel prize in 1989, the artist has exhibited in numerous galleries, museums and cities. He won several public commissions allowing him to create monumental works (iron sculpture at the Toulouse bus station, marble fountain “La Semeuse” at L’Isle-Jourdain).

The works of Darina Raskova, from Luzech (Lot), are sensitive and often humorous interpretations of human and animal emotions, as well as the wonders of nature. They come in the form of embroidery, fabric applications and crocheted pieces on cotton panels. It should be noted that the artist, originally from Bohemia, studied art in Czechoslovakia and settled in France in the 1970s.

This exhibition, not to be missed, is on until July 24. Entrance is free every day, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. (until 7 p.m. in July).

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