Artistic approach

My work addresses places, the imprint of time, ecology, and the connection between humans and their natural or built environments. I explore the bonds that unite individuals, environments, and the visible and invisible forces that shape our relationships with the world.

It is based on a longstanding observation of the relationship between built environments and organic matter and reflects the experiences that have shaped my personal journey, as well as my subtle connection with non-human elements. This relationship has developed through my past professions and sources of inspiration, thereby enriching my perception of life.

I draw inspiration from buried or imagined memories, from what I physically feel, and from the elements I observe in a specific place or in everyday life that seep into my being. Because of my sensitivity to our surroundings, my creations are like the pulse of our society, societal vibrations.

Aude Borromee, Together-detail, ensemble

Life of a body

I feel that bodies (whether built, plant, mineral, human, animal), the structures of our society, are currently being dislocated, deconstructed. My works bear witness to their suffering and question how to repair them.
I express states between vitality and decline, between destruction and healing, between life and death and graft together shreds of bodies, reconstruct scraps of nature, recompose architectural fragments, weave connections between the living. I explore how the interaction between human, non-human, inhabited places, natural spaces offers potential for healing and mutual transformation, opening the way to the possibility of new life.

My process of working in successive layers of thoughts and materials (steel mesh, rope, linen canvas, pigment, earth) blurs the boundaries between the vegetal, the mineral, and the organic, suggesting the passage of time, the fictional or real history of places, bodies, and organs, and the strata that have shaped them.
I feel that our world needs to connect with this density, a thickness akin to that of a rock face, for we act guided by images that flash by, by screens devoid of depth, by isolation. My approach is different, as my paintings, sculptures, and clay works evoke construction, life in transformation, and the durability of relationships between beings and bodies. They question how to reconnect our lives to the biosphere and thus forge deep and meaningful connections of all kinds.

My creations are like environmental bodies whose souls I weave, braid, and knot to suture and reunite dismembered organs, fragments. They result from an active form of meditation akin to the practice of horseback riding, and their hues, reminiscent of altarpieces, suggest this spiritual dimension.

Aude Borromee, Together-detail, ensemble

My work addresses places, the imprint of time, ecology, and the connection between humans and their natural or built environments. I explore the bonds that unite individuals, environments, and the visible and invisible forces that shape our relationships with the world.

It is based on a long-standing exploration of the relationship between constructed environments and organic matter, and bears witness to the experiences that have shaped my personal journey, my subtle connection with the non-human elements that surround us. A relationship that has developed through my past professions and sources of inspiration, enriching my perception of life.

Life of a body

I feel that bodies (whether built, plant, mineral, human, animal), the structures of our society, are currently being dislocated, deconstructed. My works bear witness to their suffering and question how to repair them.
I express states between vitality and decline, between destruction and healing, between life and death and graft together shreds of bodies, reconstruct scraps of nature, recompose architectural fragments, weave connections between the living. I explore how the interaction between human, non-human, inhabited places, natural spaces offers potential for healing and mutual transformation, opening the way to the possibility of new life.

My process of working in successive layers of thoughts and materials (steel mesh, rope, linen canvas, pigment, earth) blurs the boundaries between the vegetal, the mineral, and the organic, suggesting the passage of time, the fictional or real history of places, bodies, and organs, and the strata that have shaped them.
I feel that our world needs to connect with this density, a thickness akin to that of a rock face, for we act guided by images that flash by, by screens devoid of depth, by isolation. My approach is different, as my paintings, sculptures, and clay works evoke construction, life in transformation, and the durability of relationships between beings and bodies. They question how to reconnect our lives to the biosphere and thus forge deep and meaningful connections of all kinds.

My creations are like environmental bodies whose souls I weave, braid, and knot to suture and reunite dismembered organs, fragments. They result from an active form of meditation akin to the practice of horseback riding, and their hues, reminiscent of altarpieces, suggest this spiritual dimension.

Text written by Pauline Lisowsky, 2024

Aude Borromée’s artistic work stems from a deep-rooted process of connecting her body with a support and materials of the construction kind. Painting is the artist’s first means of expressing memories and vivid images from her attentive walks. In her canvases, colors come together in a process of stratification and overlapping, expressing the fragility of the environments we inhabit and a certain vitality: the urgency to act. An architectural ruin appears, sketched in ink, fragments of buildings, a world in the grip of a devastating phenomenon.

The body, whether human, animal, vegetable or architectural, is at the heart of her artistic approach. The artist dialogues with her material, a chicken wire that is both malleable and rigid. By folding and twisting, she creates a volume, like a body, from which images of living organisms, landscapes and geological formations can emerge. She uses millimeter-diameter rope with great freedom, developing a vocabulary of knots and torsions, with which she creates interactions with wire mesh. These two materials, both links, seem to support or need each other. Her sculptures are like structures that hold together, yet are on the verge of collapse. They evoke a process of vitality, repair and proliferation.

In some sculptural works, the woven, bound and knotted rope is the image of a living being in the process of colonizing a natural space, an environment (Lichens). In others, the mesh builds outgrowths or cells (Shelters). In still others, the forms are reminiscent of the modeling of a natural material. A process of transformation and regeneration emerges, as if nature were meeting the built environment. A movement between opening and closing, between extension and compression, like the expression of a vital breath is felt in front of his works… A parietal dimension, an energy, telluric forces are also expressed. The artist tends to pursue the phenomenon of metamorphosis within her works. She envelops her sculptures and creates their imprints, witnessing a situation, a posture, an interaction, a presence with an environment, traces embodying the past of a territory.

In the series Architected bodies and their remains, Aude Borromée confronts a lacquered steel plate with a wire mesh, inserted into an opening. Through a variety of stitches created with her rope, the sculptor generates and develops a conglomerate of materials. A new skin covers this architectural fragment. These sculptures express the process of restoration, the work of man or the growth of plants that cling together to reinforce a bald facade. Inspired by relics or altars, a counterpart is a sublimated vestige, the memory of a residue that bears witness to history. This artistic work is akin to an attempt to preserve what has been and to offer support to this fractured element.

Her works in clay reveal the emergence of constructions and reconstruction sites. They form a whole, like a village in the making

In short, Aude Borromée’s works suggest a life in latency, a state between ruin and reconstruction, a cycle of transformation, a becoming. They are at one with the space in which they are displayed.

Interview by IconIcon Media

In the studio