ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ


The Lasting Details

Apr 26, 2025 - May 29, 2025

There is, in detail, a truth often more powerful than in the whole. A forgotten gesture, a glint of light on an object, a posture caught in passing — these are the minute fragments of reality that The Lasting Details chooses to highlight. In this exhibition, the gathered artists share a sensitivity to what may appear insignificant — those small things which, when isolated from the flow of life, suddenly take on a universal resonance.

The everyday becomes a terrain for exploration. Some artists find in it a space for introspection, others a ground for fiction. Interior scenes, still lifes, carefully chosen or accidentally present objects are elevated — not for what they represent, but for what they evoke.

In Jesse Zuo’s work, for instance, each painting documents a personal odyssey while offering a timeless vision of the interplay between strength and vulnerability. In the works of Sara Suppan and Jean Bosphore, emotion flows through intimate gestures, through bodies or objects touched, observed, framed in light that elevates them to the status of symbols.

A taste for dissonance also emerges — a subtle shift toward the strange. Alma de Beir, inspired by science fiction, offers visions in which imagination becomes a form of real-world analysis. In Vanessa Luschmann’s pieces, mystery seeps into the most mundane scenes: a suspended moment, a too-quiet atmosphere, a barely perceptible tension beneath the surface. Similar formal ambiguities run through the drawings of Steffen Kern, which masterfully deceive the eye by mimicking photography, though they rely solely on memory and imagination.

The attention to detail sometimes takes on a purely material, almost artisanal form — as in the work of Loïc Burzotta, whose extreme precision draws from a background in jewelry painting. His pieces — like those of Bella Wattles, who juxtaposes bold colors with unexpected textures — celebrate the attentive gaze, the meticulous gesture that transforms a simple object into a poetic presence. Victor Siret pushes this logic even further, embroidering absurd scenes from symbols of pop culture, thus reconciling traditional craft and collective imagination with tender, offbeat irony.

And then, as one moves through the works, something takes hold: a sense of shared intimacy. Ivan Arlaud makes this his raw material, composing interiors bathed in light where we sense a presence, a thought, a fertile moment of solitude. Everything here is suggested: a book left open, a cup still warm. These clues, scattered throughout the artists’ works, become the true protagonists of The Lasting Details. They remind us that the most expansive stories sometimes begin in the corner of a room, on the surface of an object, or in the silence of a forgotten gesture.

This exhibition invites the viewer into a space of active contemplation — to observe, to pause, to reflect. It celebrates each lingering detail that stays with us and shapes our personal narratives, while reminding us that the deepest resonance can be found in the simplicity of the everyday.



There is, in detail, a truth often more powerful than in the whole. A forgotten gesture, a glint of light on an object, a posture caught in passing — these are the minute fragments of reality that The Lasting Details chooses to highlight. In this exhibition, the gathered artists share a sensitivity to what may appear insignificant — those small things which, when isolated from the flow of life, suddenly take on a universal resonance.

The everyday becomes a terrain for exploration. Some artists find in it a space for introspection, others a ground for fiction. Interior scenes, still lifes, carefully chosen or accidentally present objects are elevated — not for what they represent, but for what they evoke.

In Jesse Zuo’s work, for instance, each painting documents a personal odyssey while offering a timeless vision of the interplay between strength and vulnerability. In the works of Sara Suppan and Jean Bosphore, emotion flows through intimate gestures, through bodies or objects touched, observed, framed in light that elevates them to the status of symbols.

A taste for dissonance also emerges — a subtle shift toward the strange. Alma de Beir, inspired by science fiction, offers visions in which imagination becomes a form of real-world analysis. In Vanessa Luschmann’s pieces, mystery seeps into the most mundane scenes: a suspended moment, a too-quiet atmosphere, a barely perceptible tension beneath the surface. Similar formal ambiguities run through the drawings of Steffen Kern, which masterfully deceive the eye by mimicking photography, though they rely solely on memory and imagination.

The attention to detail sometimes takes on a purely material, almost artisanal form — as in the work of Loïc Burzotta, whose extreme precision draws from a background in jewelry painting. His pieces — like those of Bella Wattles, who juxtaposes bold colors with unexpected textures — celebrate the attentive gaze, the meticulous gesture that transforms a simple object into a poetic presence. Victor Siret pushes this logic even further, embroidering absurd scenes from symbols of pop culture, thus reconciling traditional craft and collective imagination with tender, offbeat irony.

And then, as one moves through the works, something takes hold: a sense of shared intimacy. Ivan Arlaud makes this his raw material, composing interiors bathed in light where we sense a presence, a thought, a fertile moment of solitude. Everything here is suggested: a book left open, a cup still warm. These clues, scattered throughout the artists’ works, become the true protagonists of The Lasting Details. They remind us that the most expansive stories sometimes begin in the corner of a room, on the surface of an object, or in the silence of a forgotten gesture.

This exhibition invites the viewer into a space of active contemplation — to observe, to pause, to reflect. It celebrates each lingering detail that stays with us and shapes our personal narratives, while reminding us that the deepest resonance can be found in the simplicity of the everyday.



Contact details

87, rue de Turenne Paris, France 75003

What's on nearby

Map View
Sign in to ºÚÁϲ»´òìÈ.com