Cyril Lancelin

Cyril Lancelin (born in 1975, Lyon, France) is a French artist.
Cyril Lancelin develops a hybrid work made up of sculptures, immersive installations, drawings, virtual experiences in the Metaverse and videos that forge links between the physical and the fictional.
It is from a plastic vocabulary based on primitive geometry that links architecture and the human body, the everyday and the functional, the perennial and the ephemeral, science and nature.
He began his career working for architects and artists in Paris and Los Angeles, using 3D modeling techniques and virtual images that he developed in the 1990s.
He is using Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality in his exploration of tridimensional matter research.
His practice is shaped by immersion and movement, by the porosity of limits, by innovation, by a search for a world that is half data, half real.
The notions of repetition and parametric generation are recurring themes in his work. It anticipates our passage into a world of multiplied and shared data.
The artist sets up a connected territory through a conceptual dialogue between his practices and the experience of the public.
Among his emblematic works are immersive sculptures such as Connections (commissioned by Snapchat, Dubai Expo), Flap³ (commissioned by Google, Design Miami Basel), Arches Waterfall (Hyundai Daegu, South Korea), Cube Sphere Gold (Les Extatiques 2021, Paris La Défense), Remember Your Dreams (commissioned by Porsche, Paris), Pyramid R5 (commissioned by Renault, Geneva), Pyramid of Care (commissioned by Lancôme, Shanghai), and Mille Lieux sous le Rose (commissioned by the Centre Pompidou, Paris). He is also the creator of The Meeting Place, the first interactive NFT environment in the metaverse, developed in collaboration with Benny Or.
In 2025, he presents Pyramidopolis, a solo exhibition in Paris, and takes part in the exhibition Euphoria at the Grand Palais, organized by Balloon Museum, as well as Pyramid Sunflower at the New York Botanical Garden as part of the exhibition Van Gogh’s Flowers.
Digital or real, his works offer an essentially optimistic vision, drawing an artificial and experiential landscape.
He lives and works in Lyon.
Cyril Lancelin develops a hybrid work made up of sculptures, immersive installations, drawings, virtual experiences in the Metaverse and videos that forge links between the physical and the fictional.
It is from a plastic vocabulary based on primitive geometry that links architecture and the human body, the everyday and the functional, the perennial and the ephemeral, science and nature.
He began his career working for architects and artists in Paris and Los Angeles, using 3D modeling techniques and virtual images that he developed in the 1990s.
He is using Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality in his exploration of tridimensional matter research.
His practice is shaped by immersion and movement, by the porosity of limits, by innovation, by a search for a world that is half data, half real.
The notions of repetition and parametric generation are recurring themes in his work. It anticipates our passage into a world of multiplied and shared data.
The artist sets up a connected territory through a conceptual dialogue between his practices and the experience of the public.
Among his emblematic works are immersive sculptures such as Connections (commissioned by Snapchat, Dubai Expo), Flap³ (commissioned by Google, Design Miami Basel), Arches Waterfall (Hyundai Daegu, South Korea), Cube Sphere Gold (Les Extatiques 2021, Paris La Défense), Remember Your Dreams (commissioned by Porsche, Paris), Pyramid R5 (commissioned by Renault, Geneva), Pyramid of Care (commissioned by Lancôme, Shanghai), and Mille Lieux sous le Rose (commissioned by the Centre Pompidou, Paris). He is also the creator of The Meeting Place, the first interactive NFT environment in the metaverse, developed in collaboration with Benny Or.
In 2025, he presents Pyramidopolis, a solo exhibition in Paris, and takes part in the exhibition Euphoria at the Grand Palais, organized by Balloon Museum, as well as Pyramid Sunflower at the New York Botanical Garden as part of the exhibition Van Gogh’s Flowers.
Digital or real, his works offer an essentially optimistic vision, drawing an artificial and experiential landscape.
He lives and works in Lyon.
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