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Textile art-2

Adrien Vescovi’s Sensual Textile Installation Beneath Marseille’s Baroque Dome

Updated on May 29, 2026
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Inside the seventeenth-century Baroque masterpiece designed by Pierre Puget, Centre de la Vieille Charité in Marseille, home-grown artist Adrien Vescovi has unveiled Sleeping Like the Sun. On view from May 16, 2026, through January 10, 2027, the exhibition is a multi-sensory of color, textile, and historical memory.

Left: Part of the installation Sleeping Like the Sun in the chapel of the Vieille Charité. © Julia Andreone. Right: Artist Adrien Vescovi, Photo by Elsa Kostic

Curated by Laëtitia Olivier, Head of Exhibitions for the Museums of Marseille, Sleeping Like the Sun marks Vescovi’s most ambitious project to date, and its scale is nothing short of operatic.

The Centre de la Vieille Charité. © Ville de Marseille

A Fabric with a Past

The Vieille Charité is far from an ordinary white-cube gallery. One of Marseille’s finest examples of Baroque architecture, the building was originally constructed as a hospice more than 200 years ago before serving, over the centuries, as military barracks, a postwar emergency shelter, and, ultimately, a cultural sanctuary.

Left: Marcel de Renzis, 1950s, reference 2Fi371, © Marseille Municipal Archives. Right: the Centre de la Charité © Ville de Marseille
© Ville de Marseille

Vescovi embraces this richly layered history by draping the space in what feels like a form of architectural haute couture. The installation is composed of monumental swathes of reclaimed antique linen, each carrying traces of the building’s communal past.

Look closely, beyond the air kisses and champagne toasts, and delicate hand-embroidered monograms emerge alongside the beautifully worn patina of fabrics that have survived generations. The effect is a poetic evocation of a quintessential Mediterranean image: crisp sheets drying on sun-soaked balconies.

© Julia Andréone

Suspended throughout the chapel’s grand arcades, the immense textiles billow softly in the coastal breeze, shifting gracefully with the changing daylight against the golden stone façades. It is a masterclass in the tension between permanence and fragility, unfolding as a fully immersive experience.

Beneath the historic Baroque dome, massive expanses of dyed cotton filter the southern French sun, absorbing and refracting light across the ornate interior, seamlessly dissolving the boundary between architecture and art.

Left: © Olivier R. | Right: © Julia Andréone

The Alchemy of Color

Behind the visual spectacle lies the work of a true material alchemist. For more than a decade, Vescovi has centered his practice on textile, mastering dyeing, sewing, and construction with near-devotional patience.

For Sleeping Like the Sun, the artist debuts a new cold-dyeing technique that allows pigments to evolve over time. Through repeated, meticulous treatments, he layers intoxicating washes of color while surrendering part of the process to the unpredictability of the material itself. The result is never static.

Left: Preparation of dyes. Right: Studio view.© Julia Andréone

Over the exhibition’s eight-month run, the installation is intended to age in real time as the intense southern sunlight, humidity, and salty Mediterranean air subtly transform the fabrics.

Inside the Baroque interior, the experience becomes almost hypnotic. The monumental cotton works do not simply occupy the space; they absorb and reflect light, casting rich, painterly shadows across the historic architecture. What emerges is a slow, living meditation on time, material, and the layered life of the Mediterranean city itself.

© Olivier R.

The Ultimate Living Art

Perhaps the exhibition’s most compelling element is its inherent transience. Permanence and fragility exist side by side, just as they do in life: the same linens that speak of endurance also hint at inevitable fading.

Studio view, preparatory drawing for the Centre of the Vieille Charité.
© Julia Andréone

In a city where ancient ruins stand beside modernist housing blocks and the sea is never far from view, Vescovi has created an environment in which memory feels almost material, something you can touch, witness changing, and eventually see disappear.  

© Olivier R.

It is, ultimately, a reckoning with how we live among objects that outlast us, and how beauty, like happiness, often resides in the willingness to let things go.

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