VERT NUIT, NOIR JADE
This exhibition brings together the singular approaches of the designers and craftsmen at the Villa du Lavoir, demonstrating the richness of their sensitive approaches and know-how.
This September, @wildelelieu will host a unique exhibition in the heart of Le Marais, as part of #PDW25 — ”Vert Nuit, Noir Jade”, a chromatic and collective exploration from the designers and craftspeople of the Villa du Lavoir.
From deep green to inky black, the exhibition brings together singular practices, rooted in both experimentation and savoir-faire. Forms, gestures and materials echo one another — guided by a shared attention to colour, material and light, used as tools for nuance and resonance.
Set within a historic address recently restored to preserve its Parisian soul, @wildelelieu offers a warm, luminous and intimate atmosphere, ideal for creating distinct visual worlds across six connected rooms.
With the support of @bdmma.paris and the Fonds de dotation pour les Ateliers de Paris, the exhibition features and celebrates a new generation of Paris-based creators shaped by dialogue and diversity: William Amor, les créations messagères, Atelier Baqué Molinié, Big Time Studio, Sébastien Cordoleani, Sophie Cure, Aurélien Farina, Fidèle éditions, Marion Flament, Camille Flammarion, Élise Fouin Design Studio, Mathilde Gullaud, Anaïs Jarnoux et Samuel Tomatis, Hubert Jouzeau, Jenna Kaës, Karl Mazlo, Atelier Tazé – Lipreau
– Araï.
Galerie Wilde, 4 Rue François Miron
Opening on Saturday, September 6, 6 pm to 10 pm
Opening hours:
Friday September 5: 5pm-8pm
Saturday September 6 to Monday September 8 / 11am-8pm
Tuesday September 9 / 11am-6pm
Related posts
William Amor, floral artist | FLOW Magazine
Like an ecologist poet, Wiliam transforms our plastic waste into graceful flowers.
VOGUE | It’s hard to leave the new Richard Mille St Martin flagship
The Swiss luxury watch brand's new digs at St Martin's drive is the brand's largest in the world-and
Il transforme les bouteilles en bouquet monumental | Le Parisien (Par Élodie Soulié)
L'oeuvre de William Amor exposée du 7 avril au 30 juin au centre Beaugrenelle

