Spotlight on...Adèle and Antoine!

This month, The Gallery at City Hall will be featuring the work of two talented artists, Adèle Saint-Pierre and Antoine Soued in an exhibit titled "Mondes cachés / Mondes cochés." Catch it as part of the 5:30 pm guided tour, or stop by City Hall on your own anytime between 4:30 to 6:30 pm on Gallery Night. The exhibit is on view during regular City Hall business hours, Monday to Thursday from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm, through January 17.

Q: Antoine, you are a native of Beirut, and worked in Tokyo, and Adèle you are from Quebec City.  How did you each come to make Providence your home?

Adèle: I moved to Providence in July of 2021 from Brooklyn, NY, where I had been living and working since 2010. Prior to that I lived in Boston, Québec City, and Le Mans (France). Though I was born and raised in Maine, my soul is in Québec City, the heart of both my paternal and maternal heritage and ancestry and the cradle of the French language I grew up speaking. I spend my summers there, and the academic school year here in Providence.

Antoine: Born and raised in Beirut, I studied architecture and spent my early professional years working in various studios that were developing interesting projects and ideas. I traveled the world quite a bit and landed a job in Tokyo in 2019. After Covid I headed to the United States to discover the wonderful town of Providence. I fell in love with this city and its people, and it has been my home ever since.

Q: Adèle, your artist statement says that your watercolors are inspired by "stains and cracks" in Providence sidewalks. Please tell us more about that!

Adèle: For as long as I can remember, animals and human figures have been jumping out at me from things like creases in fabric or wood grain patterns on floors. The water stain on the ceiling of my childhood bedroom, for example, was a big wolf howling at the moon. After reading Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way in the months leading up to Covid, I started taking pictures of the stains and cracks I was noticing on the sidewalks during my walks in Brooklyn and then painting the worlds of animals, humans and fantastical creatures they contained. Since moving to Providence, it is the stains and cracks I see on the sidewalks here that inspire my work, including the pieces I will be exhibiting at the Gallery at City Hall. I have been writing about this process and exploring what my earlier pieces communicate in my weekly blog.

Q: And Antoine, you are an architect by day.  How have architectural drafting methods influenced your work?  

Antoine: My illustrations are a natural extension of my profession and design process. I work based on models and images, extracting the essence of their atmosphere by abstracting the subject to its bare essence. I rely heavily on the contrast of shadow and light.

Q: Tell us more about the name of your exhibit, Mondes cachés / Mondes cochés, and what visitors can expect to see.

Adèle: Hidden in the stains and cracks of the sidewalks are entire worlds of people and animals doing everyday things, hence the first part of the title Mondes cachés. My show will feature an eclectic collection of new pieces ranging in themes from weight lifting to bread making, as well as a series of portraits of the quirky personnel of the imaginary Pharmacie Vachon. Finally, one of the walls will feature a cigar-themed work in collaboration between Antoine and me. 

Antoine: By changing the a of cachés to o, we get cochés, which means “to (make) check (marks),” a movement that loosely describes the process behind the pieces that make up my show. The work I will be exhibiting depicts scenes from daily life in the different cities I have lived in or visited. These scenes are suspended in time.