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Indian ink drawing (with a little oil paint) using a pigeon quill. The story this painting tells: Monsieur Jean de La Fontaine did not have the leisure to write this short fable, due to a lack of infinite time. On a beautiful spring day, Mariette left her knitting, which she let slip, and took her newly published book. She went to frolic wherever the wind would take her. On the way, she met Blanche, a mutt-like dog who was tracking a stray deer.… Come with me, Blanche, we are going to smell the weather, pick these beautiful daisies and feast on our freedom. Off they went, arm in arm. She sang, Blanche followed her. Suddenly, a deer came out of the woods and Blanche pulled so hard on the leash that Mariette thought she had lost her arm. The other arm, by a balance reflex, immediately tensed. Mariette screamed so loudly that everything stopped. She clutched her book as the idiot rubbed himself against her leg.
Francis Germain, with a rich background in music and events, expresses himself artistically through various mediums, notably pen and Indian ink. Oscillating between art brut and singular art, his unique technique demonstrates freedom and originality, like the pigeon feathers he uses to draw. Francis Germain's works evoke a rich range of human emotions and life stories, reflecting his vision of the artist as a sheep separating from the flock.