Paris 2024: official posters by illustrator Ugo Gattoni are revealed


By AGENCY
An image of the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games official posters by French artist Ugo Gattoni seen at the Musee d'Orsay in Paris. Photo: AFP

With a nod to Surrealism and an obsession with detail, the official posters for the Paris 2024 Olympic and Paralympic Games, unveiled on Monday, highlight the capital's historic monuments and sports facilities.

The respective posters for the Olympic and Paralympic Games, designed by Parisian artist Ugo Gattoni, complement each other to form a double poster.

They illustrate the main historical monuments in Paris, such as the Eiffel Tower, the Arc de Triomphe and the Grand Palais.

Gattoni used vibrant colours and striking landmarks to illuminate the posters for the Paris Olympic Games in an art deco style inspired by the city's flamboyant past. Photo: AP
Gattoni used vibrant colours and striking landmarks to illuminate the posters for the Paris Olympic Games in an art deco style inspired by the city's flamboyant past. Photo: AP

They also show the sports venues and facilities to be used during the Olympic and Paralympic Games: the Stade de France, the River Seine and the Pont Alexandre III, but also the sea, in a reference to Marseille and the Teahupoo surfing site in Tahiti.

The official posters are inspired by the surrealist artistic movement, with a level of precision and detail unprecedented in the history of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

An employee rolls up the official posters designed by Gattoni for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at a printing house in Nemours, south of Paris. Photo: AFP
An employee rolls up the official posters designed by Gattoni for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games at a printing house in Nemours, south of Paris. Photo: AFP

Through this artistic choice, Paris 2024 is paying tribute to the "Surrealist Manifesto" written by Andre Breton and published in 1924, the year of the last Olympic Games to be held in the French capital.

Eight official mascots of Paris 2024 are hidden in these posters in a thinly veiled reference to the children's puzzle book series "Where's Wally?"

"This represents some 2,000 hours of work," Gattoni told reporters.

The posters are currently being displayed at the Musee d'Orsay until Monday. - Reuters

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Paris , Olympics , Posters , Art , Surrealism , Ugo Gattoni

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