What’s in my mind?

3 12 2009

I like the idea that all the texts I read and all the images and films I watch and that I memories randomly throughout my life will be useful someday. I like this idea because it makes me feel like I have some culture, some knowledge of the world and the cultures that surround me; that I exist because I learn.

It’s not often that I have the opportunity to use that trivia. A few years ago, six or seven to be precise I went to my first pub quiz. Blinded by my young and too powerful ego, more shiny than useful, I thought I was going to finally get all that knowledge out of me and impress everyone. Surprisingly, I failed in great lengths.

Throughout the years I have been sometimes in average positions, sometimes in worst ones but overall this has been a big disappointment to me. And I felt like all the knowledge I had in me was not the right one, not the useful one.

Back in Paris, I have started to attend some pub quiz again, with some better results… and yesterday we finished second out of 23 teams. It’s not about being second, it’s not about the champagne bottle we could have won, it’s about hope, it’s about believing that we can. Yes Yvan! I believe I can do it.

I can say it now without being too pretentious: One day I will win that pub quiz. May be not next week, or next year, but one day I will sip that glass of champagne with sparkling bubbles tasting like my sparkling mind that has been set to sleep for too long.

(Pub quiz at the Green Linnet, Paris – With Páraic Maguire as quiz Master who does a extremely good job: “Stern but fair”)





The circle of life within life

30 11 2009

It’s funny how things seems to evolve a lot and then you realize all of a sudden you are back at the same point.

Take me, for example. Four years ago, I started my first job in The City (London) in a new office, new industry and new skills… Since then I worked two years there, decided to change job, industry and continent and arrived in Africa. Learned new skills, in a new industry, in a new world. After that, I decided to go back to my first loves, back to Paris, start my business in yet a new industry.

One might the position I am in today say it’s completely different than the one our years ago.

Well it’s not. And the reason is named: Carmelia. I am back at the same spot because I just bought a plant for my new desk and I named it Carmelia…

Carmelia next to my desk in Paris

Well this reminds me of something I wrote more than 2 yeard ago.





Dive into my life

27 11 2009

So this is it, after only a few months I am done. Or actualy I am only starting. I have spend the past six months working in my bedroom on my computer or on the phone, calling, design choosing, dismissing, buying, typing…

And now I am finaly ready to open my own little shop. My Own Little Shop, four words very simple, incredibly dull but so important to me. I have created a brand, an image, a shop, an atmosphere, a proposition for people out there on the net looking for cool clothes and cool itms to inhance there interior.

The shop is www.PirartSociety.com it sell clothes for men, pop and cool, snazzy and trendy. Some toys too or sculputures, or art design. Everything is done by Tany, handmade (for the big part). Only limited series because it’s made for the happy few…





The end of summer

7 09 2009

It has been a long and difficult summer, a summer that seems to be getting to an end. I have spend most of my days working on the Pirart Society project. Everything is going on very well, I have finished all my prototypes and even started to produce some models.

So whats left? Do the website… Finalise the deal with a belgian factory for them to start producing part of my clothes, and deal with day to day administative tasks which are really the anyoying part of the job.

I should receive soon my new business card, and I must admit I am very exited about them as I have put a lot of effort to design them and make them look dashing. wim wam boom. The labels I received look very nice too.

Apart from that I am under a constant stress, as I imagine anyone in my situation would be. The financial implications and repercussions on my life are also non negligible, living and working at the same place added to the long days and weeks and eating pasta ten times a week does not make it to easy but for now I’m still feeling great and highly motivated (mainly because I am happy with the results I got until now and about the positive reaction of people who has seen my work until now.





Exhibition by Tany – Video

1 12 2008

This is a short video made by Tany on his exhibition currently held at the Alliance Francaise of Johannesburg – South Africa, until the 6th of December 2008. Following a successful launch on the 27th of November, the 16 oil paintings can be purchased (the ones still available) by contacting Tany. Price list available on request.

Tany’s Exhibition.

Exhibition details and poster here.
www.dejavu-production.com





Une Saison Mémorable

20 11 2008

Partir loin et profondément sans réfléchir
Sous le tapis poussiéreux d’un autre monde
Et rechercher le bonheur dans l’avenir
Malgré les doutes acidulés qui nous inondent.

Il faut boire effréné, partout et constamment,
Dans toute envie et tous gestes, au goute a goute,
La beauté. Se défaire sans cesse du carcan
Que l’on s’est imposé et la suivre coute que coute.

Apprendre, grandir et devenir. Dans son sillage,
S’en inspirer, y aspirer : comme une image
Qu’il faudrait étendre au dessus de sa vie
Pour la contempler satisfait de son dernier lit.

Tany, Novembre 2008
www.dejavu-production.com




Exhibition by Tany – Nov. 27th – Johannesburg

5 11 2008

Exhibition : Paintings by TANY

Opening on Thursday 27 November at 6pm

Yellow Frog by Tany

Yellow Frog by Tany

Colours ! Red, Gold and Green. Fed from the start with fresh pop culture, witty advertisement and subversive entertainment Tany has created a world of his own ; where paint and stories come together in a string of unexpected and characteristic portraits. Hip, hop. Come and see this family album of people chanting cacophonously in his imagination.

So who’s He ? The big boy Tany : a Frenchman born in the 80’s and educated in Paris. It’s not what you think ; the multicultural character travels around the globe – hop, hop – to better understand his inner mechanisms. On his journey, stimulated by powerful foreign aesthetics he started creating relentlessly. That is when Tany’s world was created using reminiscences of Damian Hurst, Klimt, Alechinsky, Zeng Fanzhi or Bacon’s works. Soon Tany became father to the dejavu-production.com project, his virtual gallery of multi-disciplinary artistic creations. Welcome to Tany’s land. This November, The Alliance Française will be exhibiting his work for the first time in Johannesburg. Ta-Da !

At the edge of his reasoning, things come deconstructed and meaningless. They float around in his mind and it is unclear to him how they should fit back in. So he mingles, he mixes and what comes out is what you will witness… and most importantly what you will make of it.

(The exhibition continues until Saturday 6 December.)

Venue
Gallery Gerard Sekoto
Alliance Française of Johannesburg
17 Lower Park Drive corner Kerry Road
Parkview – opposite Zoo Lake

Gallery hours
Monday – Thursday : 9 am – 8 pm
Friday : 9 am – 6 pm
Saturday : 9 am – 1 pm

For more information
culture.jhb@alliance.org.za
011 646 1169





Le Kilimandjaro, des dauphins et une mer de dollars

26 10 2008

Il y a beaucoup de jours comme celui-ci ou la vie semble bien fade. Retour en arrière, il y a deux semaines : début des vacances.

 

Mardi soir à minuit nous prenons l’avions direction Moshi, une ville au pied du Kilimandjaro, Tanzanie. L’Afrique, encore et toujours. Un pays Musulman, le farniente, les couleurs : j’adore déjà. Arrivé de bon matin, nous rencontrons le guide et réglons les derniers détails administratifs avant le depart. L’après midi nous nous baladons dans cette ville propre et chaude. La terre y est molle et le ciel gris sombre. Le lendemain nous commençons l’ascension du Kilimandjaro, départ à 1900m.

 

Pendant cinq jours nous campons sur les flancs de la montagne, de plus ne plus haut, de plus en plus froid et de plus en plus beau. Nous nous installons dans un camp à 4600m d’altitude en fin de matinée du cinquième jour. La tension est palpable, l’appréhension est omniprésente.

 

A minuit ce même jour nous débutons l’ascension finale. Il fait zéro degrés, et la nuit est noir : la lune n’est pas encore la. Nous partons pour marcher six heures dans le noir, dans le froid qui s’accentue a chaque demi-heure. Vers cinq heure du matin nous somme a 5600m d’altitude, il fait bien en dessous de -10C ; la fatigue et la faim ce font sentir. Le groupe se crispe, les grimace se figent, il faut avancer avant que le froid nous cloue sur place. Nous n’avons fait qu’une pause de cinq minutes jusque la. La marche est interminable, les minutes passent comme des heures. Je fixe bêtement les talons de celui qui me précède (je les éclaire avec ma lampe frontale), je me concentre sur ma respiration et je pense. Je réfléchis, j’angoisse : J’ai faim, j’ai trop faim, il faut que je mange, j’ai trop mal aux jambes, elles me lâchent; non ca va, je tiens bon, j’ai mal au cœur, a la tête, c’est le Mal des Montagnes qui commence ; non ca va, je tiens bon. Quelle heure est-il ? Quelle altitude ? Cela doit bien faire 50m, un quart d’heure depuis que j’ai demande, peut être moins, peut être plus. Que c’est long. Qu’il fait sombre. Le temps s’étire et ce répète comme une vieille cassette débobinées. Le soleil ne va-t-il jamais se lever ? Il fait si noir ; Je fixe les talons de celui qui me précède, je me concentre sur ma respiration et je pense. Je réfléchis, j’angoisse : J’ai faim, j’ai trop faim, il faut que je mange, j’ai trop mal aux jambes, elles me lâchent; non ca va…

 

Un peu après 6h du matin nous atteignons l’entrée du plateau, à 5700m d’altitude. Il y fait moins vingt degrés et le vent soufflent très violemment, a telle points que nous vacillons en marchant comme une bande de pantins emmitouflés et enivrés. Arrive a cette etape, nous nous laissons aller a un grand soulagement et nous nous relâchons un peu mais pas le temps de faire une pause, il fait continuer jusqu’au sommet, 195m plus haut, 1h plus haut. Le soleil se lève enfin alors que nous arrivons au panneau indiquant le sommet de l’Afrique. Le mythique Kilimandjaro est sous nos pieds, 5895m au dessus de la mer. Atour de nous les lueurs roses éclairent les nuages, le glacier, le cratère et les brumes. Deux heures plus tard nous rejoignons le camp à 4600m. Cinq heures plus tard nous rejoignons extenués le camp à 3100m. Le lendemain midi nous somme de retour à l’hôtel. Cela aura dure sept jours, a dormir dans la tante posée au beau milieu des champs de liberté.

 

Nous prenons l’avions pour Zanzibar, ile paradisiaque de l’océan indien qui n’a plus trop d’intérêt, puisque c’est devenu un parc à touriste semi-sauvage (le parc) ou le dollar et devenu la deuxième langue nationale. Tout se monnaye, même les sourires et les indications informelles. Quel intérêt me direz-vous ? La mer, oui bon, elle est belle, chaude et turquoise mais sent le pétrole des bateau-taxi qui baladent des bancs de touristes crachant leurs billets verts comme des distributeurs bienveillants ; on se met dans la file, on fait comme tout le monde, on crache, oui bon. Quel intérêt alors ? J’y ait nage avec des dauphins. Oui, oui. Au dessus, au dessous, sur les cotés, devant, derrière, une vingtaine de dauphins filant lentement pendant quelques minutes avec moi au creux des vagues. Incroyable ? Non, non : tout ce monnaye vous dis-je. Quel intérêt alors ? Les vacances au soleil avec des amis ; quelques rires ; quelques moments de libertés ; le plaisir de se reposer sur son lit dans une chaleur moite, caressé par le souffle du ventilateur régulier au son du muezzin; le dépaysement ; l’architecture.

 

Retour en avant, au train-train de Johannesburg : les emails ; les dossiers ; les affaires urgentes. Il y a beaucoup de jours comme celui-ci ou la vie semble bien fade.





I’m Sitting on Top of Kilimanjaro

26 08 2008

The intro: “I’m Sitting on Top of Kilimanjaro” is a Johnny Clegg’s song. It shows how important the Kilimanjaro is. Tanzania, between DR Congo, Kenya and the Indian Ocean, is the land of the Serengeti, Zanzibar and Mount Kilimanjaro.

The Setup: When I was in Durban, I was trying to tick off one of the long lasting items of my to-do list: “Find a meaning to life”.
I saw an old man sitting in the sand and staring at the sun. Thick blond hair, tanned skin, he seemed mature enough. I asked him if he knew what the meaning of life was while looking at him dead in his bloodshot eyes. Get high, he said. Get high.

How high?

The hook: In the car, on the way back I flick through my lonely planet. Mount Kilimanjaro, 5895m, the top of Africa. Well that’s high. That’s well high.

What do you need?

The Plan: Plain tickets. Sleeping bag, gloves, high altitude sunglasses, hiking shoes. A backpack, a camel back, sticks, under gloves, thermal underwear for the legs, thermal underwear for the chest, polar pants, polar shirt, polar sweater, hiking pants, waterproof pants, a waterproof thermal jacket, a frontal lamp, a scarf, lip stick, a pocket towel, medicine, vaccines, a guide, a guide assistant, a dozen porters, a cook and training.
Ouh! That’s a lot of boys.

We – us three getting high – have decided to go through the Machame route and reach the peak of the paramount piece of land during a seven days walk. No refuges, only tents, and the cold wind.

October 15th, that’s the start date, and hopefully by the 27th I’ll have crossed out that annoying to-do item.

The beginning.





Sophisticated Fun

3 08 2008

Raffle, raffle. Ladies and gentlemen choose your fun !

- So what do you want to do this weekend?
- Ski.
- I bet you do, fool!

Africa, a land full of surprises. Friday night, leave Johannesburg towards the sunny south; go through Frankfurt and Bethlehem, cross the border to Lesotho, make your tires squeak in tight curves of the mountains for a while and there you are: a ski resort. Ta-da!

Ski Lesotho with Anne-Elodie

Ski in Lesotho with Anne-Elodie

Wonder. You might. It’s not a ski resort per say. It’s a large band of snow with everything you would find in any other ski resort, but in minute quantities.

Top notch boards and a ski tow. Chalets and warm wine. Snow, sun and twisted ankles. Everything, I told you.

The next day we go for a walk. Meet Oscar, the crazy drunk running the lodge – the previous night, he spent half an hour talking to a 2 year old girl like Papa Shultz – so, he tells me, you climb up the water fall, then you reach the top of this mountain, and then you follow the ridge until you are tired. Then you turn and walk back. Capito?

Wam bam. Three hours of hiking, a chocolate bar, two litters of water, two border posts and 4 hours drive later, here we are back home. Johannesburg.

Ski in Africa on August the 2nd, it was not on my to-do list but I’ll add it and tick it off. Done.

What next? Kilimanjaro or Scuba diving. Why not both?