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  • Chinese chickens in London
    London chicken.jpg
  • New-York City, Chinatown.
    New-York_City_Chinatown001.jpg
  • New-York City, Chinatown.
    New-York_City_Chinatown002.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_010.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_132.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_131.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_130.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_128.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.
    Montreal_127.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. <br />
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. <br />
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. <br />
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".<br />
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.<br />
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_126.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.
    Montreal_111.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.
    Montreal_110.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_109.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_108.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_106.jpg
  • Chinatown
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways 
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. 

Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_068.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_133.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_009.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.

    Montreal_129.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.
    Montreal_112.jpg
  • Chinatown<br />
The area was once home to Montreal's Jewish community, with thousands of Yiddish speaking immigrants settling in the area from 1890 to 1920, as part of a Jewish quarter centred on Saint Laurent Boulevard.<br />
The Chinese immigrants to Montreal arrived in March 1877. The first Chinese that created Montreal's Chinatown belonged to the Chan, Hom (Tam), Lee, and Wong clan groups. Many Chinese settled in the area because they worked for the railways <br />
Among the first Chinese residents was Jos Song Long who opened a laundromat on Craig Street (today Saint Antoine Street).<br />
In 1902, the area officially became known as "Chinatown", and specifically referred to several blocks centered on De La Gauchetière Street between Chenneville and Clark Streets. <br />
<br />
Originally called Ville-Marie by European settlers, Montreal is the most populous municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec and the second-most populous municipality in Canada. 
It is named after Mount Royal, the triple-peaked hill in the heart of the city. 
In the Mohawk language, the island is called Tiohtià:ke Tsi. 
It is a name referring to the Lachine Rapids.It means "a place where nations and rivers unite and divide".
In the Ojibwe language, the land is called Mooniyaang which means "the first stopping place" and is part of the seven fires prophecy.
Named a UNESCO City of Design in 2006.
    Montreal_107.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_031.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_029.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_027.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_024.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_022.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_023.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_020.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_021.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_018.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_017.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_006.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_016.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_015.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_013.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_011.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_012.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_010.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_009.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_008.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_005.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_004.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_002.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_001.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_030.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_028.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_026.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_025.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_019.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_014.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_007.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng. <br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    NIFC_003.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_010.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_008.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_005.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_001.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_009.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_007.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_006.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_004.jpg
  • In resonance with the Lyon Biennial, the contemporary art center of the Nouvel Institut Franco-Chinois welcomes Mengzhi Zheng.<br />
Arrived in Paris at the age of seven, he nourished himself from a childhood between his two cultures and became an artist. A resident of Lyon since 2012, this invitation is the perfect opportunity to discuss his work - with a contemporary eye - on issues of space and habitat, which has been driving him since a return trip to Ruian in 2008. Through drawings and volumes, the artist will invoke a large central sculpture imagined for this exhibition time. Frail skiffs on a table - Abandoned Models - and drawings on walls will complete his spatial approach of the place.
    MZ 2_002.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_025.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_023.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_022.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_020.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_024.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. 
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_021.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. <br />
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.<br />
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_16.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. <br />
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.<br />
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_19.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. <br />
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.<br />
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_18.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. <br />
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.<br />
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_17.jpg
  • This young woman, barely 18 years old, already has an impressive hit list. <br />
Among his many titles, she is French champion kickboxing 2018, French champion k1 2018, French champion Pankration (introduced into the Greek Olympic Games in 648 BC) 2018 but also French champion Sanshou (Chinese kickboxing) for 2013, 2014, 2016 et 2017.<br />
She is coached by her father, Sylvain, creator of the club "Born to fight".
    Lynds_NPC_15.jpg