
Sylvestre Gauvrit (b. 1977) does not sculpt material; he sculpts movement. His work is a quest for absolute fluidity — the kind felt in the barrel of a wave or the curve of a wing. Born in an ancient forest and shaped by a life surfing the globe, Gauvrit's art acts as a portal between the raw dynamism of nature and the cold precision of contemporary design.
His sculptures are moments of suspension, where metal forgets its own density to become a line of pure energy. These works serve as "open-source chargers" in the urban landscape — inviting the viewer to plug in, breathe, and find a subtle balance between the visible form and the invisible flow of life.

