Fine Art: Conceptual (PROFESSIONAL) - HONORABLE MENTION
The last thirst

Photo © Bernard Avantin
Support this photographer - share this work on Facebook.
Ape’s art is a combination of tableaus, he builds with corroded metal and Photographs. Rich in texture and colors, they illustrate his personal mythology fed by his solitary years in the bush and his vivid imagination.
Traveller at heart, having spent most of his life on the road, Bernard Avantin is complex, secretive and full of surprise. He fancies calling himself an ape, probably because humanity isn’t meant for him.
Always changing, his path went from dirt red in the Australian outback to concrete and paved like the plant where he worked: “I walk never once imagining where it may take me”. Raised by French parents in Morocco, he left his home when he was 22 to go gem hunting in the vastness of the Australian outback, until he finally ended up switching his hiking boots for steel caps entering the contracting business in the city.
Ape’s images are extremely detailed with many intertwined stories captured in rust and minerals. They have a primitive, unruly, rough feel that reflects his views on human or animal behaviours, his marvel and disappointments. Illusion of simplicity, they reveals more than what is firstly seen. They are charades and tales of a fantastic universe which turn out to be so close to our own. Layer of mystery are added, symbols, primitive stories…
There is a definite playfulness in his tableaux. He is inviting the public into a guessing game full of humor and magic. The result has a primitive feel, amazing depth, complex colours scheme, extravagant imagination and a definite creativity.
Beasts, fairies, demons and gods are hiding in all his photographs inviting your reason, your sight and your ability to escape from reality.
Spirited Personality and Famous Roots
Agnès Durbet-Giono is a French-born, grand-daughter of Jean Giono, the famous French writer from the middle of the 20th century. That is a reason why she sometimes accompanies her work by quotes from his writings. Describing her artistic beginnings, the artist confesses her resistance to any formation and qualification since an early age. She was never able to conform to what was expected and teachers were mere shadows who had little influence on her life. She started to take pictures after her introduction to the industrial world where she felt at ease.
In a Quest for Balance between Feminine and Masculinity
Sensing the presence while creating in a world haunted by masculinity and virility and after taking pictures of sewages treatment plants, water filtrations system, and factories, she over-imposes their silhouettes. Using two contrasting images to question the overrated perception of what society see as beautiful and ugly, the artist aims to balance feminine and masculinity, writing the love letter in every picture. Not interested in reality or witnessing any beautiful scenery, historical event or political moment, Durbet-Giono’s works are not aggressive or accusing. She uses all mediums in her possession and capacity to translate a feeling, vision and even futile of the magic habituating her everyday life.
Work with a Strong Message
Asserting that each of her exhibitions in Sydney and France were equally important and personal milestones, Durbet-Giono feels the public’s feedback as the crucial aspect of her success. She doesn’t think the reality is what is fed to people by the media. Her message is clear: “Dance with all the demons and angels hidden in all the rays of light and the dark places. Breathe the contrasts and live as you possibly can, love with all this passion that mold us into flesh. Don’t believe global reality at least for short laps of your life, one breath at the time. In changing yourself you can improve way more than you think in this world.” By Suzan Wang
BACK TO GALLERY
Ape’s art is a combination of tableaus, he builds with corroded metal and Photographs. Rich in texture and colors, they illustrate his personal mythology fed by his solitary years in the bush and his vivid imagination.
Traveller at heart, having spent most of his life on the road, Bernard Avantin is complex, secretive and full of surprise. He fancies calling himself an ape, probably because humanity isn’t meant for him.
Always changing, his path went from dirt red in the Australian outback to concrete and paved like the plant where he worked: “I walk never once imagining where it may take me”. Raised by French parents in Morocco, he left his home when he was 22 to go gem hunting in the vastness of the Australian outback, until he finally ended up switching his hiking boots for steel caps entering the contracting business in the city.
Ape’s images are extremely detailed with many intertwined stories captured in rust and minerals. They have a primitive, unruly, rough feel that reflects his views on human or animal behaviours, his marvel and disappointments. Illusion of simplicity, they reveals more than what is firstly seen. They are charades and tales of a fantastic universe which turn out to be so close to our own. Layer of mystery are added, symbols, primitive stories…
There is a definite playfulness in his tableaux. He is inviting the public into a guessing game full of humor and magic. The result has a primitive feel, amazing depth, complex colours scheme, extravagant imagination and a definite creativity.
Beasts, fairies, demons and gods are hiding in all his photographs inviting your reason, your sight and your ability to escape from reality.
About author:
Inspired by love, Agnès Durbet-Giono creates images of her own reality that refer to a realm beyond the line between awareness and dream. Using symbolism as a key of her expression, she tells a story saturated with mythology and paganism. Fascinated by the Italian Renaissance and classical Greek statues she adored the way they pushed the body form to extreme unrealistic excess and postured the portraiture of humanity in total luxuriance. She loves the hidden treasures of the primitive and their false uncomplicated aspects. Searching for contrasts, Durbet-Giono subjects range from the urban and industrial environment to the traditional beauty of the nudes. Her visual language is characterized by flesh and metal, wood and concrete, as well as mineral structures.Spirited Personality and Famous Roots
Agnès Durbet-Giono is a French-born, grand-daughter of Jean Giono, the famous French writer from the middle of the 20th century. That is a reason why she sometimes accompanies her work by quotes from his writings. Describing her artistic beginnings, the artist confesses her resistance to any formation and qualification since an early age. She was never able to conform to what was expected and teachers were mere shadows who had little influence on her life. She started to take pictures after her introduction to the industrial world where she felt at ease.
In a Quest for Balance between Feminine and Masculinity
Sensing the presence while creating in a world haunted by masculinity and virility and after taking pictures of sewages treatment plants, water filtrations system, and factories, she over-imposes their silhouettes. Using two contrasting images to question the overrated perception of what society see as beautiful and ugly, the artist aims to balance feminine and masculinity, writing the love letter in every picture. Not interested in reality or witnessing any beautiful scenery, historical event or political moment, Durbet-Giono’s works are not aggressive or accusing. She uses all mediums in her possession and capacity to translate a feeling, vision and even futile of the magic habituating her everyday life.
Work with a Strong Message
Asserting that each of her exhibitions in Sydney and France were equally important and personal milestones, Durbet-Giono feels the public’s feedback as the crucial aspect of her success. She doesn’t think the reality is what is fed to people by the media. Her message is clear: “Dance with all the demons and angels hidden in all the rays of light and the dark places. Breathe the contrasts and live as you possibly can, love with all this passion that mold us into flesh. Don’t believe global reality at least for short laps of your life, one breath at the time. In changing yourself you can improve way more than you think in this world.” By Suzan Wang
BACK TO GALLERY