Delphine Miquel
“In my work, where it is central, the body is not seen as a mere separate anatomical envelope, but as a porous membrane, a threshold of exchange, connected to all that surrounds it.”
— EXCERPT FROM INTERVIEW (23.02.25)
Delphine Miquel is a Paris-based sculptor whose work explores the body as a site of transformation and interconnection within the living world. Drawing from a background in fashion and fine arts, her practice focuses on sustainability and the dynamic relationship between materials, form, and the environment. Using organic and composite substances, she creates sculptures that evolve in response to their surroundings, emphasizing ecological cycles of growth, decay, and renewal.
Her work invites reflection on the body as a porous membrane—interconnected with plants, minerals, and unseen forces. Sculptures embody this threshold between dimensions, where the visible and invisible, human and non-human, intersect. Influenced by philosophy, psychoanalysis, and ecological thought, Miquel aims to create poetics of connection, offering viewers a space for contemplation on the resonance of life and the fragile presence that unites all living beings.












