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Ninon Hivert's Sculptures and Collages Use Discarded Items.
There’s a quiet magic in the things we throw away, a second life waiting to be discovered, and no one understands this better than French artist Ninon Hivert. In her Paris studio, nestled within the creative hub of Chapelle XIV, Hivert doesn’t just create sculptures and collages; she conducts delicate archaeological digs into the soul of discarded objects.A cracked piece of porcelain, a fragment of a forgotten letter, a rusted hinge—these are not mere materials to her, but characters in a silent, ongoing narrative. Her work asks us to pause and consider the biography of a thing: where has it been, whose hands have held it, what conversations has it witnessed? This process is deeply human, a form of listening to the whispers of the inanimate.It’s a practice rooted in empathy, in the understanding that value isn’t inherent but assigned, and that beauty often blooms most vividly in the cracks and imperfections of the overlooked. Hivert’s artistic alchemy transforms what was destined for the landfill into poignant, poetic compositions that speak to memory, loss, and renewal.She connects us to the invisible threads of history and personal story that cling to these fragments, reminding us that our own lives are similarly constructed from collected moments, some polished and displayed, others tucked away but no less significant. Her art is a gentle rebellion against a culture of disposability, a tactile, heartfelt argument for looking closer, for caring more, and for finding the profound stories hidden in plain sight, waiting for someone like Ninon Hivert to give them a new voice.
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#Ninon Hivert
#sculpture
#collage
#found objects
#art exhibition
#poetics
#upcycling
#contemporary art
#Chapelle XIV