Ankorstore /  Stationery & Writing /  La Sardine Plastique /  Art journal Loïe
Art journal Loïe
La Sardine Plastique

Art diary Loïe

For lovers of nature and flowers. In vase, jar, pattern, perfume or illustration. Those spend their time doodling flowers. They are made for the Loïe notebook inspired by Loïe Fuller. A notebook for creatives on the move Loïe Fuller was an American dancer and one of the pioneers of modern dance; she is famous for the veils she twirled in her serpentine dance choreographies and for her talents as a director. Through her choreographies she tried to represent nature, from flowers to butterflies. Creativity is like a dance that we compose. If they too are always on the move and their pencils or brushes are always on the move, then Loïe will be their ideal muses. An art journal for the undecided With journal art, the more you experiment, the better. The multiple varieties of paper in the Loïe notebook invite them to try everything: drawing, writing, collage. Its pockets will contain all their leaves and flying pansies. With this notebook, there is no need to choose a particular technique. They are all possible. Inspired by Loïe Fuller, stage name of Mary Louise Fuller, born in Hinsdale on January 22, 1862 and died in Paris on January 2, 1928, was an American dancer and one of the pioneers of modern dance; she is famous for the veils she twirled in her serpentine dance choreographies and for her talents as a director. Loïe Fuller trained at the age of 16 in burlesque dances. It was as an actress that she discovered her calling on the evening of October 16, 1891, during the creation of the play Quack Medical Doctor in Holyoke, Massachusetts. Dressed in a long white silk shirt, she improvises large movements to interpret a woman under hypnosis. The public then reacts spontaneously by exclaiming “A butterfly!… An orchid!…” Through her freedom of invention, she was the first to create scenographies of a kind dreamed of by the great theoreticians of the modern stage, Edward Gordon Craig and Adolphe Appia, who considered light to be a fundamental element of representation. The advent of electric lighting and Fuller's creative imagination sparked a revolution in the performing arts. Loïe newspaper art can become: - an art diary -a travel diary -a botanical notebook