Installation

«Notre dit pays» de Louis Guillaume

July 07th — September 06th 2026
Opening times
and access
Admission
This event is scheduled for the following dates
Tuesday July 07th 2026
Wednesday July 08th 2026
Thursday July 09th 2026
Friday July 10th 2026
Saturday July 11st 2026
Sunday July 12nd 2026
Monday July 13rd 2026
Tuesday July 14th 2026
Wednesday July 15th 2026
Thursday July 16th 2026
Friday July 17th 2026
Saturday July 18th 2026
Sunday July 19th 2026
Monday July 20th 2026
Tuesday July 21st 2026
Wednesday July 22nd 2026
Thursday July 23rd 2026
Friday July 24th 2026
Saturday July 25th 2026
Sunday July 26th 2026
Monday July 27th 2026
Tuesday July 28th 2026
Wednesday July 29th 2026
Thursday July 30th 2026
Friday July 31st 2026
Saturday August 01st 2026
Sunday August 02nd 2026
Monday August 03rd 2026
Tuesday August 04th 2026
Wednesday August 05th 2026
Thursday August 06th 2026
Friday August 07th 2026
Saturday August 08th 2026
Sunday August 09th 2026
Monday August 10th 2026
Tuesday August 11st 2026
Wednesday August 12nd 2026
Thursday August 13rd 2026
Friday August 14th 2026
Saturday August 15th 2026
Sunday August 16th 2026
Monday August 17th 2026
Tuesday August 18th 2026
Wednesday August 19th 2026
Thursday August 20th 2026
Friday August 21st 2026
Saturday August 22nd 2026
Sunday August 23rd 2026
Monday August 24th 2026
Tuesday August 25th 2026
Wednesday August 26th 2026
Thursday August 27th 2026
Friday August 28th 2026
Saturday August 29th 2026
Sunday August 30th 2026
Monday August 31st 2026
Tuesday September 01st 2026
Wednesday September 02nd 2026
Thursday September 03rd 2026
Friday September 04th 2026
Saturday September 05th 2026
Sunday September 06th 2026

Whether it is seen as a tree from the distant East, a biblical motif, or an evocation of idyllic islands, palm trees have taken on so many forms in the collective unconscious that the origin of its domestication is difficult to pinpoint. In this work, it becomes part of the Château’s history, since its shape is derived from in situ architectural elements. 

As part of the Voyage à Nantes

A date palm rises from the castle moat where the “Tower of the Spaniards” once stood before being destroyed in a violent explosion in 1800.

Like the phoenix from which it takes its Latin name (Phoenix dactylifera), the tree emerges from traumatic ruins as a symbol of renewal and life’s victory over time. Yet the palm also carries memories of colonial trade routes that intertwined the forced movement of plants with the trafficking of human beings.

Louis Guillaume works with living materials gathered during his explorations. Here, he engages directly with the castle’s architecture: the trunk echoes stained-glass motifs, while the palms mirror the frond-vaulted ceiling of the staircase, a masterpiece of Flamboyant Gothic architecture.

The title comes from a 1466 text by Duke Francis II: Nostredict país. Guillaume reads it with mild irony as “our so-called country,” a reminder that this territory was shaped through encounters and influences from elsewhere.

The installation combines natural and manufactured materials. Pine resin collected through tapping captures traces of the past, while hand-crafted ropes weave a structural network that holds this new ecosystem together, perhaps one day providing shelter for future inhabitants.

Informations pratiques

4 Rue Premion, 44000 Nantes
Free