MARC LE REST FRANCE, b. 1970

Biography

WHEN ART MEETS THE WILD

Marc Le Rest’s work exists at the crossroads of fashion, portraiture, and animal representation, creating a world where garments transcend the human body and become adornments for the wild. His paintings depict lions, giraffes, chimpanzees, and zebras dressed in contemporary and erotic lace outfits, forming a bestiary of high fashion. Drawing inspiration from the Renaissance and Northern European masters such as Memling, Holbein, Dürer, Clouet, and Van Eyck, his work balances minimalist formalism with baroque-like obsession for detail, particularly in the elaborate costumes. This deep connection with portraiture merges with another strong influence: the tradition of animal painting in art history, referencing the hunting paintings of Snyders and Van Aelst, the equestrian works of Stubbs, and the naturalist legacy of Audubon, extended into contemporary art by Walton Ford. Like evolving fashion collections, his creations liberate clothing from its human constraints, allowing it to take on new forms in an imagined, hybrid world. As a result, Le Rest constructs a universe where history, nature, and couture collide in surreal harmony.
Works
  • Marc Le Rest, Akechi
    Marc Le Rest
    Akechi
    60 x 90 cm
  • Marc Le Rest, Cabaret 3
    Marc Le Rest
    Cabaret 3
    100 x 70 cm
  • Marc Le Rest, Cabaret 7
    Marc Le Rest
    Cabaret 7
    100 x 70 cm
  • Marc Le Rest, Gorille Galiano
    Marc Le Rest
    Gorille Galiano
    120 x 120 cm
  • Marc Le Rest, Le Baiser
    Marc Le Rest
    Le Baiser
    146 x 114 cm
  • Marc Le Rest, Sultane 1
    Marc Le Rest
    Sultane 1
    146 x 89 cm