Galerie DA END

On entering a private art gallery today one generally appreciates, apart from the quality of the works exhibited, the sobriety of the architecture and the neutrality of the space. Thus it is rare for the space itself to make as strong an impression as the works on display. This is the slightly unsettling observation one makes when crossing the threshold of Da-End. The private art gallery opened its doors this summer in Saint-Germain des Prés. (…) composed of three rooms, corridors, alcoves, a few lecterns and easels in which the light and shadows play on the rich colours of the walls. The space is a hidden gem, « halfway between a cabinet of curiosities and a secret abode » explain the gallery owners, the photographer Satoshi Saikusa and his companion Diem Quynh. This is an antechamber of an opium den or a boudoir, both of delights and pain. It is as if the spirit of the Symbolists and the Decadentistes, with Huysman at their head, had finally found a place to rest in Paris. A dwelling « à rebours », where the spirits of Verlaine, Baudelaire, Nerval, Poe and Mallarmé mingle with the contemporary works. Da-End signifies oval in Japanese, a term which evokes the intrauterine world, fantasies and nightmares, ecstasy and suffering. Artificialia, Curiosa, Naturalia, Erotica: it is beyond the boundaries of art and the starting point of a new quest: that of the search for the rare, the bizarre and the precious. Da-End is a marvellous anachronistic place: both dark and brooding where poisonous flowers grow in a greenhouse from which heady fragrances escape.

GALERIE DA END


17 rue Guénégaud  75006 Paris
01 43 29 48 64

MALIPARMI

Ethnic fashion with a touch of Italian chic, anyone? At Maliparmi we enter a real feminine dressing room. A funny, colorful, elegant dressing room, always made in noble materials, where each of us will find his style: essential pieces, accessories, one-night splurge, everything is there. In Saint-Germain des Prés as in Milan, the Malliparmi style stands out, it is unlike any other.

MALIPARMI


74 rue des Saints-Pères 75007 Paris

01 45 44 67 52

DE GOURNAY

Décor Tissus Créateur Décoration Paris

De Gournay is a somewhat magical House, capable of creating all kinds of decorations: a chinoiserie fresco, 19th century French wallpaper, a ceiling made with gold leaf, nothing is impossible. For this, the House calls on the best craftsmen and exceptional decorative painters, trained in all techniques, from the most ancestral to the most innovative. French know-how in all its splendour.

Décor Tissus Créateur Décoration Paris

DE GOURNAY

15 Rue des Saints-Pères  75006 Paris

THIERRY LEMAIRE

Thierry Lemaire is an architect, interior designer and designer. From his passions for the work of Jean-Michel Frank, Paul Dupré-Lafon or Jean Prouvé, he drew the taste for graphic lines, purity, noble, strong and timeless materials, precious and rustic, smooth and rough, such as marble, bronze, Macassar ebony, lacquers or exotic essences

But this enthusiast of the decorative arts of the twentieth and twenty-first century also has the taste for extreme sophistication that can be found in each of his sets where he expresses a real talent as a scenographer.

Its gallery of the Carré Rive Gauche is a setting that offers a real showcase to its furniture but also to the works of painters and ceramists whose work defends.

THIERRY LEMAIRE

18 Rue de Beaune 75007 Paris

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Galerie LUCAS RATTON

The gallery specializes in ritual works from Africa. Whether it be sculptures from West Africa, such as the large Tyiwara crests of the Malian Bambara ethnic group, the “classics” Fang or Punu of Gabonese art, or even the statuary with magical or prophylactic virtues of the tribes Teke, Luba and Kusu from Congo.

For Lucas Ratton, the passion for African art is a family heritage. His grandfather Maurice Ratton, and his great-uncle Charles Ratton, were both gallery owners of Arts Premiers, Maurice in Saint Germain des Prés, Charles in his famous apartment rue de Marignan. Great friends of the avant-garde artists of the 1920s, they were both at the origin of an appreciation of an art that had been underestimated until then.

Galerie LUCAS RATTON


11 rue Bonaparte 75006 Paris