Llanelli Star

A LILLE BIT OF WHAT YOU FANCY

THE LATEST EDITION OF THE LILLE3000 ARTS FESTIVAL MAKES THIS FRENCH CITY ONE OF EUROPE’S MOST CREATIVE GETAWAYS, SAYS GEMMA BRADLEY

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LYING flat on my back beneath a ring of light, I close my eyes as psychedeli­c music plays from a speaker.

This trippy, transcende­ntal experience is part of summer-long arts festival Lille3000, an event that’s been taking place in Lille and the Hauts-de-France region’s museums, art galleries and restaurant­s, for six editions.

But it is 2022’s celebratio­n, Utopia, that looks set to cement this French city’s reputation for championin­g abstract, mind-altering art.

Le Serpent Cosmique (The Cosmic Serpent) – the installati­on I’m listening to – is on show at the Hospice Comtesse Museum (32 Rue de la Monnaie; €7/£5.95).

Curated by journalist Fabrice Bousteau, it links strands of DNA with serpents, to highlight the symbiotic relationsh­ip between humans and nature.

It’s not the only surreal work on display. I’m also enamoured by a vegetable-headed hominoid called Minitos.

Created by artist Jean-Francois Fourtou, the outlandish piece was inspired by a tale he would tell his daughter about vegetable people who help make dinner and tend to the garden.

From the moment I arrived in Lille, an hour and a half on the Eurostar from London St Pancras, I was greeted by 10 large green urban art installati­ons, erected in honour of the Utopia celebratio­ns. It was a sign of things to come.

Lille’s relationsh­ip with modern art really took off in 2004, when it became the European Capital of Culture.

Two years later, Lille3000 started with an aim of continuing the artistic momentum.

This year’s theme focuses on links between people and nature in an era of climate crisis and unobtainab­le ideals. It all sounds rather lofty, but what’s on display is actually a lot of fun.

At La Piscine Museum (roubaixlap­iscine.com; €9/£7.65) a gallery housed in an art deco swimming baths, I’m taken aback by the array of fascinatin­g sculptures and artworks.

Pieces by Rodin, Picasso, Maillol and Giacometti are centred around a huge pool with a sunrise and sunset at either end.

Several of the bath’s original showers and bathrooms have been restored, adding to the quirkiness of the place.

At the Palais des Beaux-Arts (pba. lille.fr/en; €10/£10.50), I enter into immersive exhibition La Foret Magique, curated by Bruno Girveau and director Regis Cotentin.

It includes a giant mirrored image of the Major Oak in Sherwood Forest, Nottingham, created by the English artist Mat Collishaw to symbolise his distaste for Brexit.

The tree – the biggest oak in Britain – is famous as it reportedly provided a shelter for Robin Hood and his men, and still attracts thousands of visitors yearly in Nottingham.

In Collishaw’s work, it is only surviving because it is being held up by chains and supports, which he takes to mean that being alone, or independen­t, does not necessaril­y mean success. It’s a fair and chillingly valid point.

I continue my art trail at Gare Saint-Sauveur (garesaint sauveur.lille3000.eu), a former goods station transforme­d into an exhibition centre, which also has a nightclub, a stage and a bar. Free access exhibition Novacene, curated by Alice Audouin and Jean-Max Colard, is housed in the vast open-plan space.

Of all the post-apocalypti­c pieces

This year’s theme focuses on links between people and nature in an era of climate crisis and unobtainab­le ideals. It all sounds rather lofty, but what’s on display is actually a lot of fun.

 ?? ?? Pipe dream: Clay Man made by artist Fabrice Hyber in the Living Worlds exhibition at Fondation Cartier
Heads up: Minitos by artist Jean-Francois Fourtou
Pipe dream: Clay Man made by artist Fabrice Hyber in the Living Worlds exhibition at Fondation Cartier Heads up: Minitos by artist Jean-Francois Fourtou
 ?? ?? Gemma (on the left) and friends visiting Utopia in Lille
Gemma (on the left) and friends visiting Utopia in Lille

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