fbpx Michèle Lamy | CIRCA

Michèle Lamy is one of contemporary culture’s most enigmatic and influential figures. Working across art, design, performance, film, fashion and hospitality, she has spent decades cultivating a practice that defies categorisation, bringing together diverse disciplines through a singular vision shaped by experimentation, intuition and collaboration. More than an artist, Lamy has become a cultural force whose presence and ideas continue to inspire generations of creatives around the world.

Born in France, Lamy studied law before participating in the social upheavals of May 1968 and later studying with philosopher Gilles Deleuze. Over the following decades she moved fluidly between roles as a lawyer, cabaret performer, restaurateur, designer, producer and entrepreneur, ultimately becoming Co-Founder of Owenscorp alongside Rick Owens. Throughout her life, she has cultivated spaces where art, music, fashion, architecture and philosophy intersect, building a practice rooted in community, dialogue and creative exchange.

In 2022, Lamy collaborated with CIRCA on LIMBO, a contemporary still-life film broadcast across public screens in London, Berlin, Melbourne and Tokyo. Directed by Amanda Demme and Mollie Mills, the work presented an intimate and unretouched portrait of Lamy filmed on 35mm, transforming some of the world’s busiest urban environments into spaces of contemplation and stillness. Positioned between performance, portraiture and moving image, the commission explored ideas of vulnerability, autonomy and presence, offering audiences a rare encounter with an artist whose work has long challenged conventional ideas of identity, ageing and representation.

Lamy’s influence extends far beyond any single discipline. Whether through performance, design, art-making or the communities she has helped foster, her work is characterised by a refusal to accept fixed definitions or established hierarchies. Through a life dedicated to creative freedom and cultural experimentation, Michèle Lamy continues to demonstrate how art can be lived as much as it can be made.

 

Circa Commissions

Michèle Lamy, Limbo

The history of the reclining figure in Western art is, in many respects, a history of looking. Across centuries, bodies have been arranged horizontally before us, stretched across landscapes, sofas, silks and beds, transformed into ideal forms through which successive generations projected fantasies of beauty, power, desire and possession. From Giorgione’s Sleeping Venus to Titian, from Velázquez to Manet, the reclining woman became one of art history’s most durable inventions, not simply because she represented the body, but because she established a relationship between the body and the gaze. To recline was to become visible. To become visible was to…

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SUDDENLY, A SHOULDER MOVEMENT…

You have been observed now for a while whilst time is suspended by this stare – hers. For it is she who looks at you and you who notices her. Let me explain this nuance, which has to do with time-stopping and with you who are watching, as witnesses, this gaze gleaming from beneath her charcoal eyelids. So fixed, her stare does not express any recognisable emotion, and besides – the paradox is apparent – she does not see you since you have to be there for her to look at you.

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