ALICE MAGNE Française, b. 1998
Born in Nice in 1998, she lives and works in Lyon.
Graduating from Villa Arson in 2023 with honors, she embraces a painting approach that is conscious of its production process. She is also a graduate of Chelsea College of Arts in London, where she trained in textile printing with a focus on sustainable and responsible textile design.
This education marked the beginning of her research into natural dyeing and her firm commitment to an ecological approach. This commitment was materialized through the writing of an ecological and responsible guide dedicated to painting. In the same year, she was awarded the Musée International de la Parfumerie Prize in Grasse for her research on dyeing.
In 2024, Alice Magne won the Art and Eco-design Award organized by Art of Change 21, in partnership with Palais de Tokyo and supported by the Ministry of Culture and ADEME, under the sponsorship of the Ruinart and Guerlain Houses, members of the Art and Ecology Circle at Palais de Tokyo. This award provided her with specialized training in eco-design. In 2024, she was also nominated for the CLIMART Prize from the Andurand Foundation and the Art and Nature Prize from the Ulrich Rampp Foundation.
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Landscapes Talks
What it reveals and hides 22 Jul - 6 Sep 2025Questioning landscape in the digital age means going back to basics: questioning the relationship between artistic creation and the representation of reality, and the place of man as spectator in...Read more -
Color, Surface and Light
10 Apr - 31 May 2025Our inaugural exhibition Color, Surface and Light features a dialogue between paintings and design objects, with works by ceramist Olivia Cognet adding a touch of contemporary design to the mix.Read more
The artists on show invite visitors to explore the individual and the collective. Jean-Paul Agosti, Rashid Al Khalifa, Olivia Cognet, Soo Kyoung Lee, Kahina Loumi, Alice Magne and Guillaume Moschini question what links different practices and what transcends individual subjectivity to reach a collective memory. Their research focuses on light, color and texture. Visitors are invited to explore what emerges from a work, what the artist chooses to reveal, hide or transform.