In Pierre Bruneau’s studio | The Postal Art Messenger

Pierre Bruneau has been dedicated to mail art for 26 years. An activity so original and diversified that the Musée de la Poste, in Paris, granted him an artistic residency. The Montreal artist creates and organizes creative workshops that lead him to awaken young French, Montrealers and even Africans to the art of sending beautiful mail by post. We met him in his studio.


mail art


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

One of his last works in preparation

He studied graphic communications and theatrical scenography, but one day in December 1996, Pierre Bruneau took up mail art in order to be able to pay for his studio. Subscribers (for $150 per month), friends and collectors began receiving his works monthly. The activity being a success, he has been pursuing it for 26 years. His creations, often phosphorescent, are inspired by his life and current events. Works of all shapes that require drawing, printing and DIY when the shipment is… a small sculpture.


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

The work illuminated with black light

The postal work is therefore sometimes original, and, fortunately, Canada Post always accepts it. “With the post office, many things are possible,” says Pierre Bruneau. We don’t even have to put the stamp on the top right! Canada Post told me that you can mail anything, as long as the item has sufficient postage. You can discover all his works of postal art, around 1800!, by visiting his site.




En 2020-2021, Pierre Bruneau a exposé son travail à la maison de la culture Janine-Sutto. Postez l’art ! était à la fois une expo rétrospective, une résidence artistique et des ateliers de création avec des écoles et des organismes communautaires. Dans le but, notamment, de rompre l’isolement qu’on subissait tous et toutes durant la pandémie. « On a aussi collaboré avec un Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux [CIUSS] to organize workshops in youth centres, he says. Young people wrote to intellectually handicapped people and they wrote back to them. Following this experience, I contacted the Musée de la Poste to extend it to France. »

Activities in Paris


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

Pierre Bruneau created a phosphorescent work on a bag from the French Post Office, with a drawing and poetry by Jean Cocteau.

Pierre Bruneau’s artistic residency in Paris lasted from August 15 to December 15. He continued his mediation activities in mail art. With the Musée de la Poste, he paired middle school students from three Parisian schools with Montreal students of the same level in order to exchange, by post, mostly phosphorescent works. Some 150 students took part in these exchanges. “The most fascinating thing is that some students had never written a single letter in their lives! », says Pierre Bruneau.

He also presented seven workshops in a primary school in a popular district of Paris. “Two of the classes took the opportunity to send mail art to Senegalese students with whom they had a newspaper project,” he says. 180 students took part. At the same time, Pierre Bruneau drew inspiration from the Postal Museum’s collection of postal items, including letters from Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Jean Cocteau and aviator Jean Mermoz, to create new postal artwork.

The Grover’s Workshop


PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

Pierre Bruneau in his studio

In his studio in the Grover Building, in the Centre-Sud district, Pierre Bruneau has placed some of his works on the wall, which combine sculpture, drawing and phosphorescence. Because if mail art represents three or four days of work per month, the rest of his time is devoted to his large-format phosphorescent works that work with black light or in complete darkness.





Upcoming projects


IMAGE PROVIDED BY PIERRE BRUNEAU

Moucharabiehby Pierre Bruneau

Pierre Bruneau is continuing his work on phosphorescence. When we went to his studio, he had just finished a work on moucharabieh, these openwork partitions that we see in mosques so that women can see without being seen. A complex work, done with a brush of phosphorescent paint. “I’m a bit of a maniac,” he says.





Next fall, Pierre Bruneau will return to Paris. The Postal Museum wishes to pursue its project of creative workshops. “We plan to offer at least 10 workshops in middle and high schools,” he says. The collaboration of the Maison de la culture Janine-Sutto will make it possible to organize other Franco-Quebec exchanges. The museum also wants to develop an intergenerational component that would involve schools and accommodation centres. »

In addition, he was invited by the Center Les Récollets, in Paris, and by the Maison de l’Architecture to create an installation in the chapel of the Couvent des Récollets, as part of the 23e Nuit blanche de Paris, in June 2024. He is also preparing another installation work for the basilica cathedral of Saint-Denis, in the suburbs of Paris, in collaboration with the French artist Lamyne M.

Photo gallery

Mail art

  • A work with landscapes of Charlevoix captured at different times from the same point of view

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    A work with landscapes of Charlevoix captured at different times from the same point of view

  • A work produced during the pandemic

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    A work produced during the pandemic

  • Another example of one of his mailings

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    Another example of one of his mailings

  • Old postal bags with which he creates works

    PHOTO ALAIN ROBERGE, THE PRESS

    Old postal bags with which he creates works

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