Fallon Eloy is a French artist originally from northern France, now living in the United
States. She devotes herself mainly to painting and drawing, while exploring the possibilities
of mixed media to express her emotions and those of her subjects.
Her work revolves around matter and finds a particular echo in the notion of the universe.
The theme of ambiguity and the double runs through her work, questioning the perceptive
faith that shapes our relationship with the world. Through her creations, she seeks to capture
the instant of perception, that suspended moment before the mind interprets and transforms
it.
Rather than deconstructing perception, she seeks to capture its original essence: the
intimacy that binds us to the world and, in its purity, reveals us to ourselves as sentient
beings. Her work highlights the limits of our gaze, underlining the impossibility of total,
universal perception. She explores the invisible yet palpable boundary between self and
other, reminding us that the world is never given in its entirety, and that the viewer is always,
in some way, faced with the invisible.
Now living in the United States, she continues her artistic research while discovering the light
and landscapes of America, which nourish and influence her artistic expression.