Cookie
Electronic Team, Inc. uses cookies to personalize your experience on our website. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our cookie policy. Click here to learn more.

Leurs Lieux Dвђ™un Dereglement Dans | Un Exhibition Lez Votre Fauteuil

There is a certain beauty in the dérèglement . Much like Arthur Rimbaud’s "derangement of all the senses," this proximity to disorder forces us to look at our mundane surroundings with new, perhaps sharper, eyes.

We often consume "exhibitions" of world crises, avant-garde art, or digital noise from the safety of our living rooms. Our screens have turned our private spaces into galleries of the strange. But this phrase suggests something more intimate: that the very places we inhabit are leaking. The disorder is no longer a distant spectacle; it’s a permanent guest. Finding the "Dérèglement" What does this derangement look like in our daily lives? There is a certain beauty in the dérèglement

Our "armchair" is where we scroll through the fractured realities of social media. The "exhibition" is constant, curated, and deeply unsettling. Our screens have turned our private spaces into

You cannot simply watch an exhibition that is "lez votre fauteuil." At that distance, you are part of the installation. A New Way of Seeing Finding the "Dérèglement" What does this derangement look

Below is a blog post exploring the tension between the domestic comfort of the "armchair" and the unsettling "derangement" of the world outside. The Unsettling Ordinary: Art, Disorder, and the Armchair

The word lez is an archaic French term meaning "near" or "beside" (think of Plessis-lez-Tours ). By placing a "dérèglement" (a derangement or disruption) right beside your armchair, the poet collapses the distance between safety and chaos.