BRUNO LE MATELOT'S PORTFOLIO











Expositions Exhibitions 
Paintings, drawings, sketches and illustrations
3D boxes
Ateliers dessin/pratique du Français
"En route pour la Francophonie !"

Festivals et expositions collectives
Festival du Carnet de Voyage de Clermont-Ferrand
Festival Ici et Ailleurs de Brest
Ici et Ailleurs à Brest
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Vientiane 
Les Orientales librairie-Galerie Monuments Books 2006
Souvenirs from Lao P.D.R Treasures of Asia 2009
Au Centre du Monde Restaurant Le Central
Lao true colors librairie-Galerie Monuments Books 2014
Love Letters to Vientiane T-Shop Laï gallery 2016
Pechakucha septembre 2016
Happiness is drawing on the Mekong Riversides
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Lyon France
Fragments Apocryphes de l'Apocalypse de Saint-Jean
Galerie l'Antilope 1999
203 people Café 203, Les Terreaux 2000
Made in India Librairie Raconte-Moi La terre 2001
Révélations Espace Confluences 2001
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Mumbaï India
Quelques heures passées en Inde
Alliance française de Bombay 1998
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Genève Switzerland 
Autoportrait en très catholique Roy d'Espagn
Gallerie 3000 grenouilles 1995
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Paris France
Les Bacchanales chez Hélène B. 1993 1994
Embarquements et débarquements en Normandie de Jules César au 6 juin 1944 
à l'occasion du cinquantenaire de la Libération de Paris
Cinéma LE BALZAC 1994
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TYPOGRAPHY AND I

Handmade typography
Love letters to Laos



WHAT IS "FRENCH BASTILLE DAY" ?

Bastille Day is the name given in English-speaking countries to the national day of France, which is celebrated on 14 July each year.
In French, it is formally called « Fête nationale » (National Celebration).
markers on my sketchbook

Originally built as a medieval fortress, the Bastille came to be used as a state prison. Political prisoners were often held there, as were citizens detained by the authorities for trial. Some prisoners were held on the direct order of the king, from which there was no appeal. Although by the late 18th century it was little used and was scheduled to be demolished, the Bastille had come to symbolize the harsh rule of the Bourbon monarchy.


During the unrest of 1789, on July 14 a mob approached the Bastille to demand the arms and ammunition stored there, and, when the forces guarding the structure resisted, the attackers captured the prison and released the seven prisoners held there. The taking of the Bastille signaled the beginning of the French Revolution, and it thus became a symbol of the end of the ancien régime.