Saint Laurent Babylone Opens a New Chapter With Hugo Mapelli

by OS Staff
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Saint Laurent Babylone continues to assert itself as a cultural space beyond fashion, announcing a new exhibition dedicated to Hugo Mapelli, an artist whose work moves fluidly between image-making, narrative, and conceptual exploration. Set within the Parisian bookshop-gallery hybrid, the exhibition reinforces Babylone’s role as a platform where art, publishing, and contemporary thought intersect.

Rather than functioning as a traditional exhibition venue, Saint Laurent Babylone frames Mapelli’s work within a curated environment that encourages close reading and reflection. The presentation brings together a selection of artworks that highlight the artist’s interest in memory, perception, and the construction of meaning, allowing visitors to engage with the pieces at an intimate scale.

Mapelli’s practice, often rooted in subtle storytelling and visual restraint, aligns naturally with the Babylone ethos. His works invite viewers to slow down, observe details, and consider how images operate as fragments of larger narratives. The exhibition avoids spectacle in favour of quiet tension, creating a space where interpretation remains open-ended.

The collaboration reflects Saint Laurent’s broader commitment to supporting contemporary artists through long-term cultural initiatives rather than one-off gestures. By hosting Mapelli’s exhibition, Babylone strengthens its identity as a living archive — a place where books, artworks, and ideas coexist and influence one another.

More than an exhibition, the project positions Saint Laurent Babylone as a site of dialogue, where fashion’s intellectual dimension finds expression through art. In giving space to Hugo Mapelli’s work, the Maison continues to blur the boundaries between disciplines, reinforcing the idea that culture is something to be experienced, questioned, and continuously reinterpreted.

Photos: Saint Laurent Babylone / Hugo Mapello

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