l senso vietato rappresenta la striscia bianca da cui fa capolino un fiore

Discovering Clet

According to Clet, Florence isn't a locked chest preserving treasures of the past, but rather a cradle, always ready to welcome new contemporary gems, in order to renew and further embellish itself and its history.

But who is Clet? Clet Abraham was born on October 2nd 1966 in Bretagne. He's the son of Jean-Pierre Abraham, a writer famous in France for his novels for children.

He spent several years of his life on Penfret, a deserted island in the Glénan archipelago, where his father served as a lighthouse keeper. The artistic atmosphere in his family, as well as the close relationship with the open sea, likely inspired him to dedicate his life to art. That sense of immense freedom he experienced during that period of his life can certainly be observed and appreciated in his artistic expressions.

Clet studied at the Fine Arts Academy of Rennes and in the 1990s he moved to Italy: first gto Rome, where he became a restorer of antique furniture, then near Arezzo and finally to Florence, just as the city was undertaking an architectural and artistic mutation.

Clet's a sculptor as well as a painter. One of the favored subjects of his surrealistic oil paintings are percolators that either get humanized to become protagonists of improbable processions or take the place of historical buildings, like the Baptistry of San Giovanni in Florence.

Even when the subject's a traditional one, like a portrait, he's able to surprise: for instance, when he hung his painting in Palazzo Vecchio in the empty space left by Bronzino's portrait of Laura Battiferri, which had been temporarily moved to Palazzo Strozzi for an exhibition. No one noticed anything amiss untill the following day. However, Clet's true forte lies in his urban interventions, which have made him famous but which have also been frequently removed. His Common Man is emblematic: this human-shaped sculpture, realized in metal and fiberglass, was installed on one of the spurs of Ponte alle Grazie in 2014 only to be removed by authorities and then reinstalled by the author, on and off, twice more, to finally be placed back there for good only in 2021.

The most distinctive feature of Clet's art is the application of stickers on street signs, to give them new meanings and an ironic twist. These too frequently cause the intervention of the authorities.

Photo credits: Comune di Firenze
Walking route
Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze

Piazza dei Cavalleggeri, 1, 50122 Firenze FI, Italia

Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze

Piazza dei Cavalleggeri, 1, 50122 Firenze FI, Italia

Palazzo Strozzi

Piazza degli Strozzi, 50123 Firenze FI, Italia

Palazzo Strozzi

Piazza degli Strozzi, 50123 Firenze FI, Italia

Palazzo Strozzi

Piazza degli Strozzi, 50123 Firenze FI, Italia

Palazzo Strozzi

Piazza degli Strozzi, 50123 Firenze FI, Italia

Palazzo Strozzi

Piazza degli Strozzi, 50123 Firenze FI, Italia