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Reading: Simon Laveuve’s 1/35-Scale Dwellings Hint at a Post-Apocalyptic Way of Life — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Simon Laveuve’s 1/35-Scale Dwellings Hint at a Post-Apocalyptic Way of Life — Colossal
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Simon Laveuve’s 1/35-Scale Dwellings Hint at a Post-Apocalyptic Way of Life — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 3 February 2025 20:57
Published 3 February 2025
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Whether slathered with graffiti, overgrown with moss, or decorated with found knick-knacks, Simon Laveuve’s sculptures hint at anonymous lives. Even though we never see those who inhabit the eclectic miniature dwellings (previously), the artist invites us to examine an alternative way of life.

Crafted at 1/35 scale, tiny tables, windows, paintings, and other objects fill multi-story rooms and mezzanines. In his most recent works, Laveuve continues his characteristic assemblage-like style, imagining a post-apocalyptic reality where basic belongings provide for a simple life.

Detail of “D’un bout à l’autre”

In “D’un bout à l’autre,” for example, which translates to “from one end to the other” the structure appears to have risen from the pier of a long-destroyed bridge. Its swampy base contains old tires and other detritus, while above, a narrow, three-story shack includes basic amenities.

In this imagined existence, there is presumably no electricity grid or internet, a windmill provides enough power for a fan and a refrigerator, and a tank stores water. Laveuve taps into a kind of “future past,” turning to equipment and methods many of us view as obsolete today, like gramophones and metal milk jugs.

If you’re in Paris, you can see Laveuve’s solo exhibition Voir Loin at Loo & Lou Gallery through March 1. His work is also included in Small Is Beautiful, which is currently on view in Taipei. Discover more miniature worlds on the artist’s website and Instagram.

a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with three levels that appears to have been constructed on the base on a destroyed bridge
“D’un bout à l’autre” (2025), mixed media, 52 x 40 x 31 centimeters
a detail of a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with a balcony full of furniture, a fridge, a fan, and a gramophone
Detail of “D’un bout à l’autre”
a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with three levels that appears to have been constructed on the base on a destroyed bridge
“D’un bout à l’autre”
a detail of a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with a picture frame askew on a wall covered in paintings or wallpaper
Detail of “D’un bout à l’autre”
a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with a cylindrical shape and webbed exterior, with a small table out on the 360-degree balcony
“La Volière” (2025), mixed media
a detail of a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with a small chair and table with a radio on it
Detail of “La Volière”
a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house on a metal stand
“Temple” (2025), mixed media
a detail of a 1/35-scale miniature sculpture of an imagined post-apocalyptic house with graffiti on the walls and a shopping cart
Detail of “Temple”

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