Wallpaper

Super food

Art you can eat – the conceptual cuisine of Lei Saito

- leisaito.com

Metaphysic­s and food go hand-inhand in the world of Lei Saito. The Parisbased Japanese artist began her career in the studio of Annette Messager, the doyenne of French feminist art, experiment­ing with different mediums until she found her voice with culinary installati­ons. She has created ‘decapitate­d’ pastries dressed with raspberry coulis for a Bastille Day party at the Palais de Tokyo; designed an edible landscape of violet and yellow vegetables for a dinner at London’s Matchesfas­hion; and installed a skating rink filled with clementine juice in Paris’ Galerie de Multiples. ‘Experienci­ng

l’heure bleue – that special twilight moment of the day – is integral to understand­ing that piece,’ she muses. ‘Being complement­ary colours, orange and blue cancel out each other and everything becomes transparen­t.’

She calls her culinary practice Existentia­l Cuisine. ‘I use food to tell beautiful, tasty and conceptual stories,’ she says. ‘Each menu germinates from a key word, which I develop into a tale I read as a child, or a world in my imaginatio­n.’ Listening to Saito, you are quickly caught up in her fantastic game of word associatio­n. The artist seems to have invented a language of her own, drawing on English, French and Japanese idioms, flitting like a butterfly between subjects ranging from mythology to etymology, with a little Alice in

Wonderland thrown in. All these references are baked together, as though a marble cake.

‘I’m not a cook, so my recipes are quite simple. But I carefully select my ingredient­s: organic as much as possible, right off the farm, seasonal and colourful.’ Saito does everything by herself, from grocery shopping and cooking to assembling the installati­on, and revels in the transience of her work. ‘In the end, my edible landscape is observed, destroyed, tasted and then vanishes.’

Documented here for Wallpaper* is the latest instalment of Existentia­l Cuisine,

Festina lente (Make haste slowly), prepared for a private dinner at the Centre Pompidou. The theme was ‘accelerati­on’, though Saito is more into slow food. ‘To accelerate, you have to run, or in French, courir. I thought about this phrase, courir sur le haricot, which the French use to show irritation,’ she says. The idea of speed also reminded her of the fable of The Tortoise and the Hare. Transformi­ng the word tortoise into tourte (French for pie), Saito made pies stuffed with rabbit meat. Around these centrepiec­es, the landscape was completed with a messy spread, including choux buns, coloured hummus, a creamy goats’ cheese named Fromage vite (Speedy cheese) and broken rice cakes titled Urgence

du popcorn (Popcorn’s emergency). ‘This is my eulogy for slowness,’ Saito pronounces as she puts on the installati­on’s finishing touches.

Once the landscape is complete, the piles of bags and jars used by Saito are cleared away and the space is left spotless. As if Alice, who had fallen through a rabbit hole into some fantasy realm, has returned to real life.

 ?? photograph­y: thomas Chéné writer: minako norimatsu ?? this page, japan-born, paris-based artist Lei Saito gets ready to Cook Something up opposite, the artist’s Latest edible Landscape, titled festina lente, was Served up at a buffetstyl­e private dinner at the Centre pompidou
photograph­y: thomas Chéné writer: minako norimatsu this page, japan-born, paris-based artist Lei Saito gets ready to Cook Something up opposite, the artist’s Latest edible Landscape, titled festina lente, was Served up at a buffetstyl­e private dinner at the Centre pompidou
 ??  ?? The colourful installati­on at centre pompidou included vegetables, choux buns, creamy goats’ cheese and rabbit pies
The colourful installati­on at centre pompidou included vegetables, choux buns, creamy goats’ cheese and rabbit pies

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