Robilant+Voena are pleased to present
Claude & François
-
Xavier Lalanne, an exhibition of
works by the French
artist duo on view at their St Morit
z gallery from 17 February to 27
March 2017.
François
-
Xavier
(
1927
-
2008
)
is
renown
ed for his large
-
scale
sculpture animals that often contain secret
compartments or double as functional furniture,
such as his 1964
Rhinocrataire
–
a life
-
size rhino with a desk
concealed
in its
stomach
.
Claude
(b1924)
has been
recognised for her flora
-
inspired
jewelry
and sculptures
that
are made by employing contemporary electro
-
plating techniques.
The
exhibition
Domesticated Beasts & Other Creatures
, held at the Whitechapel Gallery in 1976
launched their
career,
and
gradually, as the couple
were acknowledged in
retrospectives and commissions in France, their
pieces entered
important international
collections throu
gh the championing
of their work by interior designers
and tastemakers.
In particular, François
-
Xavier’s realistic bronze cast sheep, alongside lily vanes casts by Claude,
were displayed in the library of Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé. Furthermore, t
heir work became part of the
eclectic collection of Gunther Sachs, displayed in his penthouse at the Palace Hotel at St Moritz. The English
artist Allan Jones once recalled staying in Sachs' St Moritz penthouse, stating: "It was the most ritzy place I had
ever been in. One wall of the apartment seemed to be entirely glass, with a breath
-
taking view of the Alps. There
were Lichtenstein panels around the bathroom, a flock of Lalanne sheep on the carpet and the set of my
sculptures."
The Lalannes’ work has
been growing in popularity and in recent years achieved iconic status, propelled by the
2009 Christie’s Paris sale of Yves Saint Laurent’s collection and
enhanced
by a major retrospective at Musée
des Arts Decoratifs in Paris in 2010, curated by one of the
ir most ardent fans, the architect Peter Marino, who
owns around 40 works by the artists. Their cult
-
like following has grown exponentially and now includes private
collectors from around the world such as Tom Ford, Karl Lagerfeld, Marc Jacobs, François P
i
nault and Bernard
Arnault.
Several
of François
-
Xavier’s
iconic pieces will be exhibited: his famous
Moutons Transhumant
(1991) and
Moutons
de Laine
(1965/1974), a flock of woolly sheep used as seating
arrangements will be presented along with
Babouin
(1984), a
cast
-
iron baboon whose stomach doubles
as fireplace.
At the age of 91, Claude is still actively producing artworks from her home and studio near Fontainebleau,
France
,
and for this exhibition she has produced a number of new sculptures including
Choupatte
(2015
),
an
oversized bronze cabbage head with birdlike talons.
Choupatte
is amongst Claude’s most
recognisable
artworks
and a design that has frequented her work over
the last
five
decades.
Also included in the exhibition will be
Pomme
d’Hiver
(2015),
Pomme
(Moyenne)
(2011/2012) and
Crocodile Banquette
(
2012/2013
) a
bronze and
brass
bench
designed around
interwoven
crocodile
shapes
.