
The Saint-Georges swimming pool in Rennes, the Maison Bleue (Blue House) in Angers, the public bath house in Laval or the Gilbert pâtisserie in Saint-Brieuc... All of these Art deco monuments are decorated with sumptuous mosaics that honour the colourful and glittering memory of Odorico, a family firm that opened in Rennes in 1882 and plied its trade until 1978.
The exhibition traces the artistic and commercial fortunes of the Odorico family, Italian immigrants who left their native Friuli region at the end of the 19th century amid the financial crisis gripping Italy at the time.
The first generation of the family - brothers Isidore and Vincent - developed a largescale mosaic making business based on an original process known as the indirect method. After the First World War, the second generation - Isidore et Vincent - raised the company's simple mosaics to the level of works of art, shining symbols of the Art deco movement.
By inter-twining an intimate family story with the Odorico's work building some of the regions richest cultural heritage, the exhibition tells a story of people, craftsmanship and some truly amazing creations.
From a historical point of view it covers the main steps in the economic development of the company. It also allows visitors to take a practical look at the mosaic maker's art by re-creating the atmosphere of the Odorico company's workshops, showing thetechnical advances and creative flair that allowed the company to leave its distinctive mark in cities right across the west of France. In addition the exhibition includes sketches and technical drawings showing how Odorico's mosaics were planned for different kinds of buildings: shops, municipal bath houses, crèches, hospitals...
Since 1979 the Brittany Museum has had in its collections around a thousand drawings and sketches for mosaic designs that were donated by the last director of the Odorico company, Pierre Janvier. The images attest to the quality and variety of mosaics developed in the Odorico workshops and they have never before been put on public display.
The exhibition also has a number of documents and objects from private collections as well as decorative mosaic panels (from shops, post offices, swimming pools), films and a re-created workshop.
Mosaics made by the Odorico company can be seen on the facades of public buildings and shops and inside some of the finest houses in the west of France. This exhibition has a symbolic significance. It pays long overdue credit to an exceptional part of the region's cultural heritage which is both familiar yet often poorly understood.
The company's mosaics are a symbol of the family's successful integration and and of artistic excellence.
Today the damage caused by pollution and property development are endangering this regional heritage. The exhibition is designed to appeal to all, whatever their age and it alms to attract as many visitors as possible in order to support efforts to protect the these unique mosaics.