The Bessières station of M2 in Lausanne is transformed into a tribute, even in a small museum dedicated to Mix & Remix (1958-2016). On the impulse of the Drawing Walls Foundation and with the close collaboration of the TL, the walls of its two platforms are now animated by a hundred extracts from its press drawings. A series of meetings will follow, including an exhibition in Pyxis from September 11 to 13.
Strongly enlarged and applied with a system of stencils, these extracts evoke characters, animals and number of representations characteristic of the mixture of press drawing of Mix & Remix. They illustrate and celebrate the incredible simplicity, expressiveness and efficiency of its line to tell the world, the organizers note in a press release.
His drawing, freer and less known – which he mainly worked in the 1990s in the street, for magazines, associations or the legendary club La Dolce Vita – is also at the party. He is praised on the two facades of the opening of the station tunnel, by two monumental reproductions almost six meters high.
Three days of celebration
The tribute is called to expand. By the end of the year, these achievements will be completed by a short “museum” remarks. Consisting of a selection of reproductions of iconic works of mix & remixes, photos and an extended biography, the description located at the heart of the Bessières station will more broadly present the work and the artist’s journey.
The official inauguration of the project is scheduled for three days, from September 11 to 13. Entitled “La Fête à Mix”, it will take the form of a series of popular events in the surroundings of the station: on the terrace of the Grandes Roches, in the town and in the bedroom of the cathedral, a place that Mix & Remix occupied every night for ten years. Pyxis, the old Mudac building, will be the heart of the party, welcoming a large ephemeral exhibition.
20,000 press drawings
Mythical press designer and French-speaking artist, Philippe Becquelin, known as Mix & Remix, was born on April 6, 1958 in Saint-Maurice (VS). He died on December 19, 2016 at the age of 58, the follow -up of pancreatic cancer.
During his career, he produced nearly 20,000 simple, scathing and often timeless press drawings. He notably made himself famous for the general public by his creation for Dolce Vita and his press drawings for various French -speaking media.
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This article was published automatically. Source: ATS