Marc Ricourt

biography  |  portfolio  |  artists listing

b. 1963, Evrewx, Eure, France


SELECTED COLLECTIONS

Musée des Pays de L'Ain (French museum of woodturning)
Wood Turning Center, Lewes, Sussex, England


SELECTED EXHIBITIONS

2007        Sculpture, Objects, Functional Art Exposition, New York, NY
                Collect, Sarah Myerscough Fine Art, London, England
                Carlin Gallery, Paris, France
                Galerie Terra Viva, Paris, France
                Mairie de Choisy le Roi, France
                Where I Fell In Love Gallery, Angleterre
2006-07   Turned & Sculptured Wood, del Mano Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
2006        Galerie Orefó, Luxembourg
                Galerie Hors Série Cysoing, France
                Sculpture, Objects, Functional Art Exposition, Chicago, IL
2005        Linda Bird, Ltd., Richmond, England
                Philippe Parent Studio, Paris, France
                Galerie Fusion, Toulouse, France
                Carlin Gallery, Paris, France
                GalerieAthénée 4, Genève, Switzerland       
                Art et Création, Lyon, France
2004        Galerie Séves Artes et nature, Aix en Provence, France
2003        GalerieAthénée 4, Genève, Switzerland
                Carlin Gallery, Paris, France
                Ebène Macassar, Paris, France   
2002        Art et Création, Lyon, France
2001        Lancaster Museum of Art, Lancaster, PA


SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Arts et Decoration
Elle Décor
Ateliers d'Art
Woodturning Magazine, The Guild of Master Craftsmen, Lewes, East Sussex, England
Bois de Rêve, Bois Travaillés , Musée des Pays de L'Ain, France       
American Woodturner


ABOUT THE ARTIST

Marc Ricourt trained for 3 years in Dijon Fine Arts school and is a self-taught apprenticeship of woodturning.  In 2000, he participated in a Puy Saint Martin meeting with John Jordan and Mark Sfirri and in 2001, the ITE Wood Turning Center of Philadelphia.

For a few years now, I've based my work around a simple but very essential object, as it was the first tool created and used by mankind: the vessel. Useful, yet mysterious, the closed vessel symbolically holds all mysteries and secrets of the human soul.  I strive to find perfect harmony between wood, shape, texture and color. The utilization of unrefined material such as rope, horn and shells inlaid reinforce a sacred and symbolic sense of keeping as much purity as possible.

My work on vessels has allowed me to develop a relationship between ancient or geographically remote cultures and civilizations and modern creation. The most important facet of my work is the research and exploration of new forms, colors, textures and finishes.