07 November 2025 -
31 January 2026
Gallifet continues its exploration of high craft with this fourth exhibition, À l’accélération et à l’oubli, bringing together fifteen creatives whose work sits at and questions the frontier between art and craft.
Curated by Morgane Baroghel-Crucq, artist and textile artisan, this exhibition shines a light on a generation of artist-artisans whose work reinvents traditional techniques across a diverse array of contemporary practices. Time and materials are central to their creations. So too the ability to work together in unison, a dialogue where each depends on the other. Transmission, experimentation, the ongoing repetition of an ancient technique, and above all, the notion of co-creation, such are the fundamentals of a brave new world where artisanship is a bulwark against acceleration and oblivion.
- Grégoire Scalabre. His tiny amphorae gather into colossal architectures, where the infinitesimal meets the immeasurable.
- Jérôme Hirson.“A work reveals its maker.”
- Nelly Saunier transforms feathers into a poetic and sculptural language.
- Baptiste Meyniel. Each object is less an end than a patient conversation between material and gesture.
- Nina Fradet. Her solid wood weavings invent fragile yet powerful architectures, blending the Japanese art of takezaiku and cabinetmaking.
- Maxime Bellaunay. Wood, stone and metal guide his hand toward sculpted landscapes.
- Lise Camoin.Her plant-based dyes capture the light of the Luberon—a delicate trace of time held still.
- Aurore Thibout. Her fabrics move to the rhythm of the body, a textile memory of ancestral gestures.
- Chloé Valorso uses jewelry as a shamanic language.
- Marianne Barrier. Straw becomes refined brilliance, a humble and sumptuous reflection of passing time.
- Laetitia Costechareyre. Her indigo dyes turn textiles into acts of memory and resistance.
- Emma Bruschi reinvents rural craftsmanship into a poetic creation turned towards the future.
- Nicolas Pinon & Dimitri Hlinka reinvent urushi lacquer, between millennia-old tradition and contemporary technologies.
- Morgane Baroghel-Crucq. Her monumental weavings are works of patience and silence, offering a counterpoint of slow, reclaimed time to the turmoil of today's world.
Open from Wednesday to Saturday from noon to 6pm. Entry is free.
For further information please contact: contact@gallifet.com
Advanced booking required only for guided tours.
Guided Tours
On Wednesdays, from 4 to 5pm in French
6€/person
If you would like to arrange a private group visit, please contact anne@gallifet.com