International Garden Festival |
Hortillonnages Amiens 2023
Visit of the exhibition by boat


CAMON / PORT À FUMIER – Boat trip
Boarding pontoon
35 rue Roger Allou – 80450 Camon

In CAMON, rent a boat for 2h30 and sail to the different plots invested around the pond of Clermont.

The rental price of a boat is based on the number of people, from 1 to 6 max. including child(ren) under 3 years old
* 20€ / 1-2 people. * 27€ / 3-4 people. * 32€ / 5-6 people. * free -3 years old
+ ASCO fee per person: €1 / 11 years and + * €0.50 / 3-10 years
>>> Only by online reservation
To read the terms and conditions of sale, click here
For security reasons, animals are not allowed in the boats. Strollers must be dropped off at reception.


We invite visitors to continue to respect barrier gestures in order to fight against the spread of COVID-19.
If you want more details, we invite you to consult the evolution of the reception instructions and the health rules in force on the government website: https://www.gouvernement.fr/info-coronavirus


For any request for information, you can send an email to communication@artetjardins-hdf.com
or call +33 6 78 53 55 92

Looking forward to welcoming you soon!

The team of Art & Jardins | Hauts-de-France

EYES WIDE CUT – Émilie Breux, 2026

EYES WIDE CUT – Émilie Breux, 2026
Tuesday May 5th, 2026 Zoé Gambier

©Emilie Breux

EYES WIDE CUT / WHEN NATURE TAKES SHAPE

Emilie Breux’s practice draws on highly classical genres, from landscape to ruin, from nature to still life, to propose an active dialogue with the world around her and the presences it holds. This here and now is woven together with a set of elements belonging both to the work itself and to the relationships maintained with the genesis of a place. For the artist, art can reactivate the past and pass the baton.

At the Hortillonnages, a hybrid territory between garden, wasteland and cultivated landscape, Eyes Wide Cut resonates with the history of the Île aux Fagots, where wood gathered from the land was once bundled into faggots and transported by water by the hortillons. By working exclusively with naturally fallen trees, Emilie Breux extends this ancient gesture, one that remains respectful of living things. In this landscape shaped by water, earth and wood, sections of trees lie on the ground, sometimes clustered, sometimes scattered, as if left there by time. At first glance, the installation blends into the landscape. Then something unsettles the eye : certain sections, cut in two, reveal eyes. Watchful figures or sleeping presences, these gazes emerging from the grain of the wood lend these tree fragments an anthropomorphic dimension.

The title Eyes Wide Cut reinforces the idea of wound, of cut and irreversibility: a “cut to the quick” for a “raw gaze”. Wood becomes both subject and tool, raw material and language. Through a precise act of marquetry, rigorous and respectful, the artist reveals a presence without imposing a form. The tree, though fallen and fragmented, seems to retain something living. It still watches. It keeps vigil. A confrontation takes place between the section and the marquetry, between the raw and the crafted, between the natural and the artificial, between the tree’s original verticality and its horizontal destiny as a work of art. Because we are no longer certain of their permanence, trees, once reaching upward toward the light, appear reduced to fragments : sectioned, displaced, transformed. Yet in Eyes Wide Cut, they are not reduced to silence. They become witnesses to the past, to the present imposed upon them, and to the future they seem to question. The gaze they direct at the visitor is an invitation to observe differently, to relinquish the assumption of a right of oversight over nature and to accept, perhaps, being looked at by it. A great protagonist of the living world and a marker rooted in the real, the tree can here become a passage into an imaginary world.

Eyes Wide Cut is a frontal work, the soul of a place, a guardian that draws the spectator into a sensory experience of time and space, offering a perspective on the ephemeral and on all that is perishable and fragile.

Project realised with the support of Nolwenn Dantan / BUZZWOOD

The artist

Emilie Breux

Émilie Breux, born in 1985, is a visual artist with a mixed background in Applied Arts and Fine Arts. Her body of work reflects a clear interest in transdisciplinarity and the combination of techniques, moving between 2D and 3D by reconciling the flatness of drawing with the volume of sculpture and installation, oscillating between contextual, site-based work and a more solitary studio practice. Embracing a wide range of media and possibilities, and playing with the infinite alternatives and directions that artistic expression can take, creation opens up more possibilities for her than it exhausts. She favours the decontextualisation of forms and backgrounds, as well as the importance of site-specific work, the relationship with the viewer and art history. Her installations, with their more or less minimal vocabulary, invite the visitor to immerse themselves in an experience that is at once sensory and conceptual, a journey to the heart of sculpture and its potential. They frequently play with the laws of physics, with humour and poetry. Her various pieces are closer in spirit to contemporary vanitas: object-sculptures of often monumental scale, giant inanimate toys wrested from oblivion, carrying an interior, nostalgic sense of time. The apparent fragility of the sculptures evokes the ephemeral nature of all things. Her entire universe unfolds like an unfinished, ghostly celebration, the display window of a world held in suspense, where the artist's hand recedes in favour of the image. Émilie Breux's work has been shown in numerous exhibitions and residencies in France and beyond: at CENTRALE/LAB in Brussels (BE); at the Musée de l'Archéologie in Arlon (BE); at FRAC Grand Large in Dunkirk; at FRAC Basse-Normandie in Caen; at the Ar(T)senal in Dreux; at Resort Studios in Margate (Kent, UK); and at La Piscine in Roubaix, among others.
Voir la fiche artiste — Émilie Breux