
Eva Courch has photographed the month-long construction process of The Ant sculpture made from steel girders, nylon and polyurethane, beginning on day one and ending with the finished art work.

Eva Courch has photographed the month-long construction process of The Ant sculpture made from steel girders, nylon and polyurethane, beginning on day one and ending with the finished art work.
Each thing in my paintings was put there deliberately, knowing that nothing real can ever be perfectly replicated, only interpreted. Paintings are constructed gradually through memory, aftermath, judgement, and analysis of dozens of references. Environment and expression are removed. Images are stripped down into re-organized reality, where what remains are the un-idealized and the subconscious. The final, distilled state of the image is always imperfect, but without distraction. I aim for simplicity.

We would like to thank our generous supporters:
Corporate Supporters
Guillaume Paturel – By-encore (NY)
Chez Joce (F)
Otherpress (NY)
with the generous support of the
Cultural Services of the French Embassy
& Association Les Amis de Robert Desnos
Donors
Floanne Ankah, Anne Mourier Attal, Stéphanie Arpage & Guillaume Paturel, Sabine Aslan, Corinne Bal, Philippe Barreaud, Gisela Blanc, Marianne Bron, Laura Bron, Chong Gon Byun, Kathleen Calabrese, Pierre Carava, Martha Caroll, Florence Carmont, Marie Castro, Francis Cholle, Katharina Christl, Jay Cleary, Colin Clement, Simon Courchel, Eva & Régis Courchel, Catherine Courrier, Elisabeth Cros, Florence & Regis Degouge, Joëlle Deroy, Vincent Devisscher, Gina Diwan, Cito Dizon, Steven Feuerborn, Jeanne Fouchet & Richard Nahas, Isabelle Jouanneau Fertig, Jocelyn Guegnault, François Ghirardi, Muriel Guépin & Christophe Lemée, Judith Gurewich, Jason Hall, Michel Kelemenis, Taekyung Kim, Christine Lambert, Marine Laouchez, Jean-Francois Laugel, Jean-Pierre Lechevalier, Jean Lee, Brigitte Lemercier, David Liatti, Sara Lubtchansky & Gilles Seclin, Gael Malleret, Ella Marder & Daniel Horowitz, Germain Moyon, Marcelo Noverstein, Valentina Pace & Solo Houssein, Romain Pelleray, Julien Princiaux, Yasmeen Qureshi, Laurence Roucouly, Philippe Roux, Sophie Roux, Claude & Renée Roux, Arnaud & Beatrice Roux, Véronique Roux, Paul Rozek, Hugues de Saint Simon, François Servranckx, Clément Sobtejou, Charlotte Toulis, Aurélie Vaneck & Jean-François Salessy, Thomas Viguier, Emmanuele & Bruno Vinciguerra, The Windmill Factory.
Some donors wish to remain anonymous
The Ant has been supported by French Morning
Special thanks to Solange Cypel and Laura Bron who helped us for the fundraising campaign
Special thanks to Roy, Steve, Juan, Ramon, Tomas and Julio for their advise and help.
Without whom the construction of the exhibition would not be possible.
Donations are still welcome and deeply appreciated.Become one of our generous supporters whom have contributed to creating an exciting,
very talked about art piece.
DONATE HERE

LAST WEEK! The Invisible Dog proudly presents The Ant in the main exhibition hall. Artist Xavier Roux was inspired to create the sixty-foot long sculpture by the poem written by Surrealist Robert Desnos in 1942. This touching piece consists of a giant ant symbolizing the trains transporting Jews and other nazi victims to concentration camps. The Invisible Dog and Xavier Roux are deeply committed to this exhibition. We have embarked in the adventure of assembling the material such as nylon balloons, foam boards, sound systems, etc. It is fabricated from four elements, which are attached to a steel structure. The Ant is made of four giant translucent nylon balloons attached to a ton and half steel structure fabricated with the help of Juan Alfaro who worked with Louise Bourgeois on the making of her famous Spiders.
THE PRESS REVIEW ABOUT THE ANT
Open to public until May 2nd
Thursday through Sunday: 1pm.-7pm
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday: by appointment only
Admission Free, Donations are welcome