Béatrice Cussol

Béatrice Cussol (born 1970) is a French artist and writer.[1]

She was born in Toulouse and received a Diplôme national supérieur d'expression plastique from the Ecole Pilote Internationale d'Arte et de Recherche. She lives in Paris.[1] Cussol teaches at the École supérieure d'art et design Le Havre-Rouen.[2]

Cussol produces watercolors and drawings, as well as murals. She has had solo shows at the Centre d'Art Neuchâtel and at galleries in Vence, Nice, Paris and Marseille, and has participated in group exhibitions at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, at the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tourcoing, at the Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon, at the BAWAG Foundation in Vienna, at La Criée in Rennes and at the Venice Biennale in 2003.[1]

Her work is included in the collections of Fonds national d'art contemporain, the Musée d'art moderne et d'art contemporain in Nice, the Musée d'art moderne et montemporain in Geneva and the Fonds régional d'art contemporain of Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur.

Selected writings[2]

  • Merci, novel (éd. Balland, coll. Le Rayon, 2000)
  • Pompon, novel (éd. Balland, coll. Le Rayon, 2001)
  • Diane ? (éd. Léo Scheer, 2003)
  • Sinon, novel (éd. Léo Scheer, 2007)
  • Les Souffleuses, novel (éd. Léo Scheer, 2009)

Exhibitions

  • 1994 : Béatrice Cussol, Villa Arson, Nice
  • 1999 : Dessins 1994-1999, Mamco, Genève
  • 2000 : Goldcream, Galerie Rachlin-Lemarié, Paris
  • 2000 : Trois millions de Joconde, Art Concept, Paris
  • 2008 : Duo, avec Dominique De Beir, Galerie Éric Mircher, Paris.
  • 2008 : Béatrice Cussol et Georgia Nelson, Galerie RDV, Nantes
  • 2009 : Aux petites filles modèles, collectif, Centre d'art Le LAIT
  • 2010 : Collection d'été, collectif, Galerie Porte Avion, Marseille
  • 2012 : Le nom d'une île, Maison des arts, Malakoff
  • 2012 : Elga Wilmer Gallery, New York
  • 2013 : Spritmuseum, Stockholm
gollark: There are linked cards, which are paired card things which can just directly send/receive messages to each other over any distance. If the problem here is that your data has to run across some central network/dispatcher/whatever, then you could use linked cards in the thing gathering data and the thing needing it urgently to send messages between them very fast without using that.
gollark: It would be kind of inelegant and expensive, but maybe for time- and safety-critical stuff like this you could just send the data directly between the computers which need it by linked card.
gollark: You can save cell cost by allocating item types to cells such that you fill up your cells to max "bytes" rather than max "types".
gollark: Or to defragment the system to save space.
gollark: Yes, you could indeed do that.

References

  1. "Béatrice Cussol". Brooklyn Museum.
  2. "Béatrice Cussol" (in French). Editions Léo Scheer.


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