The Monkey and the Clay

From top to bottom
Hyperpnea Green, 2024 – Bagus Pandega. Courtesy of the artist and ROH (Jakarta, Indonesia) © Aurélien Mole
Passing her a piece of cloth, 2022 – AKI INOMATA. Courtesy of the artist and Maho Kubota Gallery (Tokyo, Japan) © Aurélien Mole
The Book of Flowers, 2023 – Agnieszka Polska. Courtesy  of the artist.
Alfil Relief/Elephant Relief (V03), 2021. Courtesy: Lin May Saeed Estate; Chris Sharp Gallery, Los Angeles; Jacky Strenz, Frankfurt/Main

La Fondation d’entreprise Martell thanks
Galleries and lenders :
Estate de Lin May Saeed & Jacky Strenz Gallery
Fondation Louis Vuitton
Maho Kubota Gallery
ROH Gallery
Sponsors :
EssarBois
Terreal-Wienerberger

The Monkey and the Clay

30 May 2026 - 3 January 2027

At the intersection of play, poetry and science fiction, the exhibition The Monkey and the Clay brings together nine international artists who explore the theme of collaboration between species. Through fable and imagination, the exhibition sets natural, human and technological productions in dialogue, sketching out new forms of alliances with the living world. Presented within a scenography evoking the forest, these hybrid works—installations, films, sculptures and sound pieces—contribute to a broader conversation on collective transformation, invoking concepts ranging from ecological compensation to eco-futurism.

‘We must help one another; it is the law of nature.’
The Donkey and the Dog

Collective exhibition with : Tania Candiani (Mexico), AKI INOMATA (Japan), Bagus Pandega (Indonesia), Agnieszka Polska (Poland), Lin May Saeed (Iraq-Germany), Shimabuku (Japan), Jessica Warboys (United Kingdom), Trevor Yeung (Hong Kong), Robert Zhao Renhui (Singapore).

Guest Curator : Emilie Villez
Exhibition Design : Atelier CRAFT
Graphic Design : Théo David Gehin

In order to better coexist within a ‘more-than-human’¹ world, human beings are learning to redefine their place within the ecosystem. Drawing on both theoretical debates and practical experimentation, contemporary artists increasingly position themselves not as conquerors of nature, but as collaborators.

Reflecting its title which embodies an interaction between the animal and the mineral, The Monkey and the Clay is permeated by the concept of interspecies interdependence, following ecological currents of thought that decentre the human. Challenging the notion of human exceptionalism and dominance over non-human species, the term ‘more-than-human’ is used across the humanities and social sciences to mark a rupture with hierarchical understandings of life.

This entanglement – animal, vegetable, mineral, atmospheric – describes a complex web of relations where no entity exists in isolation, and where every action ripples through a multitude of interconnected beings. The evolution of the word ‘ecology’ itself reveals this shift: while scientists originally defined the term as the study of interactions between living organisms and their environment, it gradually morphed into a commitment to the conservation of territories and species, before becoming a political necessity in the 1970s.

Influenced by the avant-garde positions of Land Art, environmental activism, and non-Western holistic thought, contemporary artists are pursuing more horizontal relationships, even envisioning co-creation with the non-human. Yet these collaborative bonds are complex, often unpredictable, and occasionally verge on instrumentalisation. How can we be certain of their reciprocity?

The exhibition explores these questions through artistic practices that reframe, and even bring a sense of play to, our modes of production and coexistence.

The works on display defy traditional representations of nature; rather than offering solutions, they seek to foster alternative ways of thinking. To mend fractured links, these artists engage in a process of immersion and listening, raising questions of proximity and kinship (Tania Candiani, Shimabuku) and the role of chance within the co-creative process (AKI INOMATA, Jessica Warboys, Trevor Yeung). Striving to counter fatalism, the exhibition highlights practices that cultivate a political and ecological imagination: some offer counter-narratives (Robert Zhao Renhui, Lin May Saeed), while others construct speculative fictions through technological tools (Agnieszka Polska, Bagus Pandega).


¹ The term first appeared in David Abram’s The Spell of the Sensuous: Perception and Language in a More-Than-Human World (1996). French translation: « Comment la terre s’est tue. Pour une écologie des sens  , Ed. La Découverte, 2013

From left to right – © Aurélien Mole
First Concert video and Percutor 2020 – Tania Candiani. Courtesy:  Tania Candiani Studio
River Painting, Charente, 2026 – Jessica Warboys. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Gaudel de Stampa
Earth to Earth (Terres-de-Haute-Charente), 2026 – Trevor Yeung. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Joseph Allen


The Planctonarium

De haut en bas
Performance_ArtificesChlorophylliens ©AntoineBehaghel
Lampadaire_ArtificesChlorophylliens ©AntoineBehaghel
Vase_ArtificesChlorophylliens ©AntoineBehaghel

The Planctonarium

A new space for engagement by BehaghelFoiny

30 May 2026 - 3 January 2027

As an extension of the exhibition The Monkey and the Clay – dedicated to interspecies relations – the Fondation has invited Studio BehaghelFoiny to conceive a hybrid space: The Planctonarium.

Designed as a dedicated hub for public engagement and situated at the end of the exhibition circuit, this immersive environment invites visitors to embrace a slower pace and extend their visit. Comfortably appointed, the space fosters a spirit of reading and relaxation, while simultaneously providing a dedicated setting for participation in artistic workshops.

This multifaceted space showcases the work of emerging designer Antoine Behaghel and his ongoing research into ‘Chlorophyllian Artifices’: a dive into the microscopic world of phytoplankton blooms. This vernal biological phenomenon is characterised by the sudden proliferation of phytoplankton in the ocean, regenerating the atmosphere we breathe through the photosynthesis performed by these microorganisms. Within this installation, the silhouettes of phytoplankton are reinterpreted and magnified, embodied as objects levitating within a chromatic atmosphere; the work submerges us in the oceanic ‘water column’, a space where above and below, the intimate and the distant, begin to dissolve.

The exhibition presents a series of ornamental pieces crafted by the designer using a wide array of artisanal techniques, including porcelain, tapestry, paper, and 3D printing. Beneath these suspended, luminous forms, the ‘Microscopists’ Table’ invites visitors to observe phytoplankton through a microscope and take part in hands-on artistic workshops.

Antoine Behaghelb – recipient of the 2024 COAL Student Prize for Art and Environment – will undertake a production residency at the Fondation in the autumn of 2026. Continuing his research in collaboration with the Marais d’Yves nature reserve (Charente-Maritime), he will develop a new series of glass works within the Fondation’s workshops. These pieces will be integrated into the exhibition upon their completion. Finally, he will lead a signature artistic workshop, ‘Ordinaire Extra!’, toward the end of the year.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Memo. Remembering the Futures

Top to bottom
Daybed with Monarch Butterflies © Fernando Laposse
Into the Mountain, 2019, Photo © Felicity Crawshaw, Courtesy – Simon Kenyon
Tuvalu – The First Digital Nation & Rebirth – Trauma as a performative process
Carribean Beauties © Pauline Assathiany
Los grillos des sueño © Pauline Assathiany
Metamophosis of a Herd © Pauline Assathiany

Memo. Remembering the Futures

June 13, 2025 - January 4, 2026

Collective exhibition with: Félix Blume (France), Emma Bruschi (France), Liselot Cobelens (Netherlands), Collider x The Monkeys (Australia),  dach&zephir (France), Roberta Di Cosmo (Italy), Cian Dayrit & Cla Ruzol (The Philippines),  Alexis Foiny (France), Suzanne Husky (France / USA), Simone Kenyon & Lucy Cash (United Kingdom), Fernando Laposse (Mexico), Sally Ann McIntyre (New-Zealand), Neve Insular (Cabo Verde) , Bubu Ogisi / I A M I S I G O (Nigeria),  Yesenia Thibault-Picazo (France),

Concept & Curatorship: d-o-t-s (Laura Drouet & Olivier Lacrouts)
Scenography: Olivier Vadrot
Graphic Design: WIP office
Co-produced with CID Grand-Hornu, Belgium

The exhibition Memo. Remembering the Futures showcases the work of European and non-Western artists and designers, questioning the impact of human activities on ecosystems through the lens of memory.

This project, curated by Laura Drouet and Olivier Lacrouts (d-o-t-s), was inspired by the paradoxical announcement at COP27 by the government of Tuvalu (Oceania) to fully digitize the country to preserve its memory and culture. Facing submersion by 2050 due to rising sea levels, Tuvalu is set to become the world’s first digital nation.

By documenting and interpreting ongoing anthropic perturbations, these 15 projects offer various responses to counteract the modification and loss of landscapes, biotopes, and species, which are integral to our sensorial and gestural memory, and thus our humanity.

This exploration of different ways to preserve traces of disappearing cultures and safeguard multispecific memories unfolds through multisensory installations (involving scents, sounds, performances, etc.) and archive materials. These works act as memory triggers, encouraging us to remember and, more importantly, to act.

From left to right
Rebirth – Trauma as a performative process – Roberta Di Cosmo
Dryland – Liselot Cobelens
To Block the Flow of a River is to Reject the Wisdom of the Earth – Cian Dayrit
100% Cotton – Neve Insular
Tant que les fleurs existeronf encore – Alexis Foiny
Resting Place – Fernando Laposse
IAMSIGO – Collection printemps-été 2024 – Bubu Ogisi
Almanach Collection – Emma Bruschi
© Pauline Assathiany


Hors Saison - Pablo Bras

Photo credits : Pablo Bras, ADAGP Paris © Pauline Assathiany

HORS SAISON

Pablo Bras

June 13, 2025 - January 4, 2026

Presskit

Emerging from a residency period at the Foundation, the Hors Saison exhibition is a carte blanche for designer Pablo Bras. A circular exploration of the phenomena at play, this project questions the ability of design to organize the invisible flows of air, light, and thermal energy to become tangible design materials, both at the scale of the object and the habitat.

Channeling the thermal and energetic forces of the exhibition space, the designer presents an arrangement of pieces that create a fluid environment responsive to the three seasons his installation will traverse.

Through architectural gestures aimed at making the atmospheric qualities of the space perceptible according to the seasons and our needs, the project invites us to feel temperature variations through systems of air currents, ventilation, and simple heating and cooling techniques.

Open and reproducible, the objects scattered throughout the space interact within a dynamic flow, thus recreating micro-climates. A project that encourages questioning the ecology of place and the modalities of our comfort.

Guest curator: Olivier Zeitoun

Born in 1994, Pablo Bras has been conducting research for several years focused on natural and artificial phenomena within habitats, revolving around the question of energy. Winner of the Agora for Design Research in 2019, he curated and co-designed the French Pavilion at the 23rd Milan Design Triennial in 2022, alongside Romain Guillet and Juliette Gelli.

Olivier Zeitoun is a conservation officer in the Design department at the Musée National d’Art Moderne/Centre Pompidou. He co-curated the exhibitions «La Fabrique du Vivant» (2019), «Réseaux-Mondes» (2022), and «Mimésis, un design vivant» (Centre Pompidou-Metz, 2022) at the Centre Pompidou with Marie-Ange Brayer, and co-edited the accompanying catalogs. He holds degrees in philosophy, art history, and social sciences, and is the author of articles and essays that cross disciplines, addressing issues related to the fields of art and design. In parallel, he continues his activities in curating, teaching, research, and publishing as an independent curator international partners..


JB BLUNK - CONTINUUM

JB BLUNK

CONTINUUM
June 8 - December 29,2024

The Fondation d’entreprise Martell is delighted to present the first retrospective exhibition in Europe of the American sculptor JB Blunk (James Blain Blunk, 1926-2002), organized in collaboration with his daughter Mariah Nielson, director of the JB Blunk Estate, with contributions from Anne Dressen, curator at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris.

The exhibition CONTINUUM offers an immersion into the work of JB Blunk, unknown to the general public but iconic for many artists, for whom he remains a source of inspiration. The exhibition presents a vast collection of pieces created by Blunk, allowing viewers to grasp his unique and unconventional approach: whether creating works of art or everyday objects, his work – in constant dialogue with his environment – is a powerful plea, placing creation at the heart of everyday life.

Blunk drew his inspiration from his relationship with the nature surrounding him daily: located near the small town of Inverness, California, on an exceptional site in the heart of the forest and close to the Pacific coast. Throughout his life, the artist was dedicated to creating in deep connection with his environment, utilizing the natural resources around him (sequoia stumps and driftwood, earth, stones, etc.) to craft pieces, reconnecting with ancestral forms of expression and playing with scales ranging from modest to monumental.

A selection of over 150 pieces including sculptural works, ceramics, furniture, models, paintings, sketches, and original photographs drawn from both the JB Blunk Estate and private collections illustrates the breadth of his artistic practice, at the intersection of art and craftsmanship. The exhibition includes Blunk’s earliest known ceramic vessel made in Los Angeles while a student at UCLA in the 1940s, as well as a collection of maquettes which have rarely been seen by the public until now. Additionally, letters, works on paper and other ephemera drawn from family archives shed light on the artist’s ways of working, his personal and professional connections, as well as his sources of inspiration, whether from early civilizations, different approaches to spirituality, or his pioneering vision in ecology.

A new film commissioned for the occasion captures the multiple facets of the house and studio that the sculptor built entirely by hand, from the architectural structure to the furniture, including tableware, switches, and even a fully sculpted sink. Mainly made from salvaged materials, the Blunk House, emblematic of his practice and mindset, is considered his major work of total art. The short films aim to convey the unique environment in which Blunk lived with his family near the wild coast of Point Reyes in Northern California. A second new film presents a selection of four monumental works installed in the San Francisco region: carved from blocks of giant sequoia, these public seating sculptures in urban spaces testify to another aspect of Blunk’s work.

The exhibition spans 900m2 and approaches Blunk’s work through 6 thematic sections – Japan, Landscape, Home, Archetypes, Process and Public Projects – presenting his holistic approach to design, art, and architecture. Just as Blunk did not delineate between his life and work, the exhibition sections are intertwined and porous, giving the visitor the experience of his different methods, materials, and inspirations as he experienced them: in constant, insistent conversation with each other. The scenography was specially designed by designer Martino Gamper in collaboration with graphic designer Kajsa Ståhl (Åbäke).

 “By unveiling the little-known work of an artist celebrating the power of nature, life, and creation at the intersection of disciplines, this retrospective aligns with the ambition of the Martell Foundation to encourage the emergence of innovative artistic approaches focused on the ecological transformation of territories and our ways of life.”
Anne-Claire Duprat, Director of the Fondation d’entreprise Martell

Top – Down : Courtesy JB Blunk Estate
Photos 1 et 2 : Blunk House in Inverness, Californie © Leslie Williamson
Photo 3 : JB Blunk, Untitled, c.1970 © Daniel Dent.
Photo 4 : JB Blunk carving Continuum, c. 1979. © Mike Conway
Photo 5 : JB Blunk, Untitled, c.1990 © Daniel Dent.

The exhibition catalogue is available and for sale at the Foundation’s shop.

Off-Site
From September 7th to October 20, 2024:
Opening of the Blunk Shop pop-up at the We Do Not Work Alone gallery – 58 rue du Vertbois, 75003 Paris.


Mathilde Pellé - Hollow Path

Photo credit : Aurélien Mole

MATHILDE PELLÉ

CHEMIN CREUX - HOLLOW PATH
June 8 - December 29, 2024

The Fondation d’Entreprise Martell launches its new exhibition-residency format and invites the designer Mathilde Pellé to share and develop her research approach called «Subtraction». By unfolding various aspects of the work carried out since 2016 – both experimental, critical, formal, and theoretical – the exhibition encourages a careful examination of objects proposed by our societies and the forms that can emerge through subtraction. Pellé continues the inexhaustible question that guides her creations, her thinking, and her relationship to design: «Why is there something rather than less?»

For the exhibition «Hollow Path», she experiments with the ruin of domestic environments by subtraction and imposes a protocol by which she removes material from everyday objects by scraping and stripping them, thus creating new ob­jects from the void.

Drawing on aspects of her work, she shares her insights into a direction that is completely disregarded in favour of more, addition, and growth: that of less. Her approach leads her to study the barriers (political, social, psychological, etc.) that limit our ability to choose less and/or accept it. Why is adding more, in most cases, the predominant choice? What are the logics at work that lead us globally to choose more, how did they emerge, and why?

Since the limits linked to material production must be recognised and accepted globally in these times marked by ecological urgency, should we not at the same time open up a non-limiting exploration of less, of the little, of the smallest?

If it is approached as a direction to be probed, the less allows us to reconsider our material environments and authorises a critique of the dominant models that are curiously both produ­cers of exhaustion and saturation.

Why are the abilities of artists and designers to read and analyse the world of forms (surrounding and/or produced) essential to the reformulation of a common equilibrium? In what ways can these non-academic approaches be the vectors or supports of profound transformations? It is these «hollow paths», without certain answers, that Mathilde Pellé explores.


ALMANACH - Designers' views on the resources of the Charentes territory

Designers' views on the

resources of the Charentes territory

The Almanach exhibition is the inaugural research project of the Martell Corporate Foundation, which, after 5 years of existence, has become a platform for research and experimentation in art and design, as well as a space for raising awareness and life-oriented learning.

This experimental initiative, which takes the form ofan exhibition, residencies, meetings and a laboratory of living archives was born from a reflection on the way in which a foundation, located in a context that is both rural and industrial, prosperous and remote, can constitute itself as an agent of revitalization of its territory and activate new potential for transformation for the collective. An inventory of the resources and problems of the territory quickly became essential as a prerequisite for any action.

A team of designers was commissioned to carry out a survey with multiple local interlocutors (institutions, companies, professional networks and inhabitants of Charente and Charente-Maritime), in order to identify local, natural and industrial, material and intangible.

 

Led by Olivier Peyricot with Lola Carrel, Valentin Patis and Mathilde Pellé, the team established an investigation methodology before undertaking collection and analysis work.

The subjective panorama resulting from their observations unfolds at the 2nd level of the Martell Corporate Foundation and offers an immersion in the collected samples allowing to rediscover remarkable materials and neglected deposits, living techniques and forgotten know-how.

The subjective panorama resulting from their observations unfolds at the 2nd level of the Martell Corporate Foundation and offers an immersion in the collected samples allowing to rediscover remarkable materials and neglected deposits, living techniques and forgotten know-how. Objective: to build new imaginaries and chart new paths to build a resilient and equitable future.

© Team « Almanach »
Conception graphics : Kiösk