Temple of design and stylish furniture, The Conran Shop (named after its creator, the British Terence Conran, also creator of Habitat) has settled in Paris, at 117 rue du Bac, at the corner of rue de Babylone, in the 7th arrondissement, in 1992. The building is a former Bon Marché warehouse, the structure of which was designed by Gustave Eiffel. The district is the symbol of elegance, a few steps from the Lutetia hotel, and the apartment where Yves Saint Laurent and Pierre Bergé lived, between the Maillol Museum and the Rodin Museum.
The 30x40 cm prints are presented under master keys. The dimensions indicated include the creation as well as the master key.
French manufacturing
IMAGE REPUBLIC likes different, strong, communicating images ... those that mark an era, a moment, those that make you think, smile or remember ... Image Republic loves ... the icons of pop culture, iconic personalities, cult objects and brands, creative advertising, iconic TV series, emotional moments, certain claims ...
"There's a little bit of all of this in the images that make up our collections, which better than words, speak to our passion and define the spirit of Image Republic."
Born in Bahia, Brazil, Paulo Mariotti moved with his family to São Paulo in 1978 where he studied Graphic Arts at the FAAP Foundation . With his diploma in hand, he moved to Paris in 1991 where he continued his university studies, this time he chose a course in Letters at the University of the Sorbonne. Text and images have always been a part of his professional life. In the 90s, he made storyboards for short and feature films and worked in the creation of characters for animated films. In 1999 he began to illustrate for the press and advertising, in France and abroad. At the same time, he took on the post of permanent correspondent of Vogue Brazil magazine in Paris (as a journalist). In 2013, after four years as artistic director in communication agencies, he became a correspondent for the Brazilian 24-hour news channel Globo News. Since then Paulo Mariotti has pursued his career as an illustrator as well as that of a journalist. In September of 2014 these drawings are the subject of an exhibition at the gallery of the Brazilian Embassy in Brussels. This exhibition was the first part of a tour that has the support of the Brazilian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In February 2015 the drawings of "Crônicas Cariocas" were exhibited at the Palazzo Pamphilj gallery, space of the Brazilian Embassy in Rome.