Williann – Musée de l’Ecole – 18 avenue de Verdun
Williann is an artist whose world is an inspired mix of black-and-white cartoons from the 1920s and pin-ups from the 50s. She likes to play with a limited colour palette, similar to screen printing techniques or old advertisements. All her illustrations, both retro and modern, require taking the time to observe and examine what they represent, as well as their details. Like a book of illustrations without words, she invites people to make up their own story.
Alberto Luce – 27 rue Thuret
Ciclo: "A series of paintings that recall the cycle of life, from birth to death. The three paintings revolve around this concept: one represents the individual alone, another the family (the place where a new being is born), while the last represents death. "I used animals as symbolism. Sheep are the symbol of the group, the flock, and being together. Animals whose identity disappears, like our ancestral relationship with them, and consequently, to the most solemn events of our existence, the great questions we have stopped asking ourselves."
Dodo Ose – 19 rue Andreossy
Dodo Ose was introduced to art from a young age, spending countless hours admiring the rich architecture of his hometown. He studied art in Cannes and held his first exhibitions in galleries. Seeking a challenge, he decided to pursue his career in Canada in 2010. Through his connections, he developed his own style and world, combining spray paint and watercolour. He creates works of art that blend the figurative and the imaginary. His work transports its audience into a surreal world, both romantic and dreamlike, exuding a bold sense of humour with his own poetic touch.
MonkeyBird – 15 rue Lacan
Two artists for one chimerical work by MONKEYBIRD, a 120m² fresco full of detail.
MonkeyBird is a French stencil artist duo, made up of Louis and Edouard. Their world is an invitation into a surreal universe full of wonder. Time no longer has any importance; it slips away in the face of the almost magical tangle of stencils that draw layer upon layer of their chimerical world. Monkeybird takes us on a journey through the maze of utopian cities. The stencil in their expert hands becomes lace. The finesse of the technique combines with that of the spirit.
Olivia Paroldi – Door at 20 rue Paul Bourgarel
OLIVIA PAROLDI shares her admirable woodcut work.
Olivia Paroldi is an artist-engraver based on the French Riviera. Having discovered the art of engraving during her studies, she became passionate about this ancestral technique which, particularly for the young blind people she supports, allows her to make visible what is not. Olivia creates urban prints whose main theme is childhood, which she likes to depict with real poetry. Her work exudes generosity and a love of sharing.
Wanjah – 12 rue Lacan
Wanjah is an artist from Nice. Trained in graphic design, he quickly turned to art and realism in a self-taught way and creates frescoes in the region, as well as in Ukraine with his project "Unisurter" mixing, in a single face, the features of people of different ethnicities as a message of unity and peace. His work explores different media: walls, canvases, burnt wood and even skin through his work as a tattoo artist.
M.U.R. d’Antibes, 10 rue Miquelis Raybaud, in front of the Guynemer School
M.U.R. was inaugurated in November 2024, with the work of artist KOGAONE, which dialogues with the diffraction of forms, initiated by Picasso, and the liberation of colour, as sought by Henri Matisse.
Performances are hosted twice a year (April and November).
The artistic direction of M.U.R. d’Antibes lies with Cyrille Gouyette, Art Curator and Artistic Director of M.U.R. Oberkampf: regional and international artists will be invited alternately to enter into dialogue with the artistic history of the Côte d'Azur. In this region chosen by the greatest modern and contemporary artists in the history of Western art, urban artists have a page to write, following in the footsteps of their elders.
Rémi Tournier – 2 avenue Niquet
Rémi Tournier is a member of the Toulouse graffiti movement and was part of the duo SISMIKAZOT from 2012 to 2021, with whom he painted throughout France and abroad. Passionate about photography and encounters, which form the basis of his work, since 2021, he has been developing a mainly figurative brush style, seeking to achieve a vibrant, lively output.
Through his painting, he seeks to exchange, share and convey what moves him: his vision of life and society, in a poetry that leaves room for reflection. He paints stories through scenes of daily life, portraits, as well as plant compositions, objects and still lifes.
César Malfi and Jenn Miller – Media Library, 19 boulevard Chancel
César Malfi et Jenn Miller artists from the Côte d'Azur Street Art scene have come together in a totally new way around the values of gender equality to create a fresco on the facade of the Albert Camus Media Library. A colourful collaboration based on a large space in the heart of the city, backed by one of the region’s cultural jewels, promoting the values of equality, public reading and culture for all.
Ardif – Passage Michel Genty
Passage Michel Genty provides the location for ARDIF’s fighting fish. Fish? Yes ... but look closely at the details!
Ardif is a street artist based in Paris. During his architecture studies, he became interested in the aesthetics of buildings and machines. His work explores the possible hybridisations between architecture/machines and nature, illustrated in particular by the series of "mechanimals" visible on the walls of many cities. This urban fauna creates a contrast that questions us about the impact of the artificialisation of nature and the wild instinct to be found in our urban lives.
ZDey – Châtaigniers roundabout
ZDEY's work decorates the pillars and slopes of the bridges at the Châtaigniers crossroads. An explosion of colour.
Zdey grew up in France and lives in Paris. A committed activist, he devotes all his time to painting and various humanitarian initiatives, which he manages to combine: for example, he’s coloured the walls of Colombian and Mexican schools with the help of local indigenous minorities. While his graffiti work is behind his painting, he distances himself from it to focus on a more personal world influenced by pop, modern art and the OP art movement, inviting us to an elsewhere filled with positive energy.