Singularity Exhibition Anne-Marie Vesco Born in 1957, Anne-Marie Vesco is a member of the ENS de Cachan in Drawing and Applied Arts, then from 1996 to 2011 an artist-teacher at the ENSAAMA (Paris 15th) and finally an independent artist. She lives and works in Montreuil. Rating on Artprice. Particularly prolific, she collaborates with professionals of the living scene (theater, music, dance) by painting or drawing live and in public. His figurative work comes in several series of very diverse sizes and supports, whether it be Bodies, Elephant Skins, Landscapes, Vanities or Curiosities. Her singularity has integrated her into selective private contemporary art collections such as that of Claire Durant-Ruel. Supported by the Paul Stewart Gallery in Paris, she creates through oil paintings on transparent resin with inclusion of objects, a bridge between singular art and contemporary art. Poured into molds with inclusions (insects, reptiles, hair, baby teeth, jewelry, plants, assemblages ... etc.) the resin, hardened and polished like glass, is painted "in reverse" by meticulous successive layers. We no longer know how to distinguish the true from the false, the support of the relief. These "enamels" adapt to old frames which reinforce a feeling of shift. If we add the strangeness of the fantastic and the irruption of the abnormal, we obtain a surrealism as sparkling as it is dark. In a naturalism where melancholy meets humor and preciousness, Anne-Marie Vesco applies herself to polishing talismans.
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