For the main sector of Paris Internationale, Galerie Derouillon will present a set of works by Anastasia Bay (French, b.1988), Emmanuel Beguinot (French, b.1989) and Keunmin Lee(South Korean, b.1982).
Anastasia Bay
Born in France in 1988
Lives and works in Brussels
She graduated with a BA from Ecole Nationale des Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2012 after studying under François Boisrond.
Anastasia Bay’s paintings present scenes borrowed from theater, opera or the carnivalesque scenes of Ensor or Brueghel the Elder. Her characters embody the irony of overturning society's established roles and norms at these moments of popular gathering. Bay’s work is all about contrast and balance in a very cathartic way. The choice of a precise fragment of reality in her works dissolves any narration. The mysterious, sometimes disturbing characters are caught in vibrant movements, blurring the lines of their barely sketched bodies and faces. There is a search for simplicity in her gesture, seeking for the essence of the being she is depicting. She shares with Philip Guston or Gérard Gasiorowski a bluntness in the works and the ability to express very vivid emotions through a very simple and assertive line.
Public collections: Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (US); Musée d'Art Moderne de la ville de Paris, Paris (FR); X Museum, Beijing (CN); Zuzeum Museum, Riga (LV).

Anastasia Bay
Le Sommeil d’Orlando, 2025
Acrylic and pastel on canvas
78 3/4 x 70 7/8 inches
Emmanuel Beguinot
Born in 1989, France
Lives and works in Milan.
Emmanuel Beguinot approaches his practice as both a cognitive and endurance-based exercise. His dynamic process merges the frenetic application of mixed media on paper with a collaborative gesture: placing the works in found frames—often reversed or repurposed. Through this interplay, he explores and challenges the role and significance of the grotesque within contemporary social customs.

Emmanuel Beguinot
Emotional Calculus, 2025
Mixed media on paper, artist frame
18 3/4 x 14 1/8 inches
Keunmin Lee
Born in South Korea in 1982
Lives and works in Seoul.
Keunmin Lee’s paintings transcribe the sensations experienced during hallucinatory episodes, plunging us into deep compositions with rich red hues, inside a body without limits or exteriority. About twenty years ago, Keunmin Lee was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder, a term that covers a very broad spectrum, from instability in relationships and self-image to extreme sensitivity to his environment. This diagnosis was, in essence, a form of cold definition that offered no space for alternative interpretations beyond the diagnostic label and its corresponding code, a rigid and unyielding categorization reducing an identity to an illness. For Lee, painting is an introspective and emancipatory practice in the face of this process of rationalization and quantification of sensitive, immaterial experiences. This opens the way for him to reappropriate his illness and resist social categorization, dissociating himself from art brut (outsider art) through his constant self-reflection. He paints his hallucinations in such a way as to affirm their creative and subversive potential, giving them a positive aspect rather than reducing them to the status of mere symptoms. Systems - blood, digestive, organic - thus become a metaphor for social systems, digesting, grouping individuals to obtain what they need to function, to the detriment of each person’s individuality and differences. Omnipresent in Keunmin Lee’s canvases, the body is crudely revealed to better escape norms and appeal to our deepest interiority.
Public Collection: Space K, Seoul (KR); Park Seo-Bo Foundation, Seoul (KR); Colección Solo, Madrid (ES)

Keunmin Lee
Connected Skin (II), 2024
Oil on canvas
24 3/8 x 48 inches