Opening: Thursday, July 17 - 18:00 - 21:00
Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday - 15:00 - 19:00
Eva Aubertin and Martine Saint both studied at the Institut Supérieur des Beaux-Arts de Besançon (France).
Graduates of the Bachelor's program, they are now pursuing their Master's degrees.
For the past year, they have worked as an artist duo. Together, they form a provocative and singular entity, exploring the edges of bodies, and social norms.
Eva's artistic approach is deeply rooted in personal and social exploration, where questions of femininity, power and provocation meet. Through her portraits of women, she seeks to awaken a wild force, an instinctive energy that the viewer may be unaware of at home, but which emerges forcefully upon contact with her works. This desire to unleash raw energy is rooted in her own experiences, having grown up surrounded by older women whose aestheticism and natural strength deeply fascinated her. Her inspiration also comes from the punk and rock scene, a universe that has nourished her pictorial practice since childhood, and from a broader reflection on the body, eroticism and the moments in life that have shaped her. The art she proposes is a form of rebellion, a perpetual battle against the outside world and the norms it imposes, seeking to disturb the viewer. Her work, where color, saturated space and matter meet, becomes a space of confrontation and resistance.
Martine Saint’s work emerges from rupture. She creates from the margins — with what overflows, unsettles, or is left behind. Her aim is not to produce beauty, but to extract raw reality — transformed, fractured, and unapologetic. She works with noble materials and found objects, fragments of childhood, everyday matter, sound, text, and AI-generated images. Each piece is an attempt to express what doesn’t belong elsewhere. Her installations, paintings, suspended forms, and performances are breaths — visible tensions between materials, bodies, and social norms. Martine Saint approaches her work through fracture, emotion, and disruption. Her art doesn’t seek to repair. It exposes. It provokes. It listens.