Pauline Beaudemont is 27 and has always dreamt about being a florist or a pastry chef but finally became an artist because the only reason for her to wake up at 4am is to catch a plane.MOSSLESS: Tell me about this gallery you have in your living room.PAULINE BEAUDEMONT: I live in a storefront, changed into a studio, arranged like an appartment, remasterized in a gallery. Pauline’s is more like an open (living) room for experimental projects, curatorial ideas and art collaborations. So far I have worked with Elise Lammer, a young curator from the Goldsmith College in London, on a show with 9 swiss artists on the concept of no cost / absent artist. I also organized an exhibition of Sam Falls and Daniel Turner where the art works eventually faded away. And two magazines, ‘Dorade, revue galante’ from Paris and ‘Garmento’ from New York, chose my place to do their New York launching. I am currently working on the program to start again in April with more exhibitions, editions, installations, photography, sculptures and food!ML: How does one capture the personality of a plant?PB: I have always been facinated by the plants standing in waiting rooms, entrance halls, window boxes, hanging pots… In everywhere they are considerated decoration, when no one pays attention to them or even worse, despites them, they are talking to me in their exotic language. I see in each of them an sassy attitude or a graceful carriage. They fulfil their duty with an arrogant humour. Don’t you think? I might be the only one to see that. Call me ‘The Ficus Whisperer’.ML: What’s the best exhibition you’ve ever been to?PB: It was the permanent exhibition at ‘Le Palais de la Decouverte’ (litteraly, The Discovery Palace) in Paris when I was 6. In the departement of electrostatic, the demonstrator asked me to stand on a big metal stool in the shape of a mushroom, and like an Alice in Wonderland before the eyes of a bunch of school kids I assisted to a miracle: all my hairs stood up straight towards the air.ML: What’s your favourite bar in Brooklyn?PB: Trophy Bar because it’s around the block, the drinks are ridiculously cheap and you can dance by yourself on a Monday night. 

Pauline Beaudemont is 27 and has always dreamt about being a florist or a pastry chef but finally became an artist because the only reason for her to wake up at 4am is to catch a plane.

MOSSLESS: Tell me about this gallery you have in your living room.
PAULINE BEAUDEMONT: I live in a storefront, changed into a studio, arranged like an appartment, remasterized in a gallery. Pauline’s is more like an open (living) room for experimental projects, curatorial ideas and art collaborations. So far I have worked with Elise Lammer, a young curator from the Goldsmith College in London, on a show with 9 swiss artists on the concept of no cost / absent artist. I also organized an exhibition of Sam Falls and Daniel Turner where the art works eventually faded away. And two magazines, ‘Dorade, revue galante’ from Paris and ‘Garmento’ from New York, chose my place to do their New York launching. I am currently working on the program to start again in April with more exhibitions, editions, installations, photography, sculptures and food!

ML: How does one capture the personality of a plant?
PB: I have always been facinated by the plants standing in waiting rooms, entrance halls, window boxes, hanging pots… In everywhere they are considerated decoration, when no one pays attention to them or even worse, despites them, they are talking to me in their exotic language. I see in each of them an sassy attitude or a graceful carriage. They fulfil their duty with an arrogant humour. Don’t you think? I might be the only one to see that. Call me ‘The Ficus Whisperer’.

ML: What’s the best exhibition you’ve ever been to?
PB: It was the permanent exhibition at ‘Le Palais de la Decouverte’ (litteraly, The Discovery Palace) in Paris when I was 6. In the departement of electrostatic, the demonstrator asked me to stand on a big metal stool in the shape of a mushroom, and like an Alice in Wonderland before the eyes of a bunch of school kids I assisted to a miracle: all my hairs stood up straight towards the air.

ML: What’s your favourite bar in Brooklyn?
PB: Trophy Bar because it’s around the block, the drinks are ridiculously cheap and you can dance by yourself on a Monday night. 





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