This story is taken from the Autumn/Winter 2024 issue of AnOther Magazine: Make-up: Caroline Fenouil at Artlist Paris using BYREDO Casting: Nico Mao for Midland at Art Partner Models: Bodine Van Galen at IMG Models and Balat Pal at Storm Model Management Styling assistants: Léa Sanchez and Camryn Pessin Production co-ordinators: Manon Désert and Pauline Mourguet Production runners: Pierre Menard and Yones Lakhbab This story features in the Autumn/Winter 2024 issue of AnOther Magazine, which is on sale now. Order here The TimesThe magnificent Breton home of Jane Birkin has inspired the latest novel by one of the country’s bestselling authors who bought the mansion a year after the singer and actress died in 2023 said she had long wanted to write a book with “a house as the heroine” whose feelgood novels have sold five million copies wrote the book last summer in the elegant 14-room house in Finistère a 50-year-old mother of two who feels that life is passing her by but finds meaning when she buys an old house and Registered in England No. 894646. Registered office: 1 London Bridge Street, SE1 9GF. Reading"Marie Valognes’ playful and..." More fromWork Contact Advertising Opportunities Newsletters Insights + Opinion Creatives + Projects Advice + Resources Culture + Lifestyle Nicer Tuesdays The View From... POV Forward Thinking Review of the Year Jenny Brewer Olivia Hingley Ellis Tree Elizabeth Goodspeed Liz Gorny Extra Search London-based still life photographer and art director Marie Valognes is back with new work “I often experiment with form and compositions by creating playful series but it also allows me to explore new territories within the practice,” she explains Marie is perhaps best known for the witty sculptures she made under her pseudonym “mise en” for AnOther during S/S and A/W 2016 fashion weeks based on runway looks Marie’s skillful eye for visual associations placed a blue candle dripping with wax mounted on cork in the place of an all-deconstructed-denim everything look from Marques’Almeida while an asymmetric orange long-sleeved t-shirt styled with beige flares by fashion world favourites Vetements was reimagined by Marie as an orange-wrapped tube of smoked cheese placed on a light brown paper bag In her latest 80s postmodernism inspired series Grid Marie continues to use objects in unconventional ways to create surreal sculptures springs and a cupcake case all making an appearance plus I collect all sorts of objects and shapes The objects and background colours change between images but the overall effect stays the same — odd totem-like columns made up of objects seemingly suspended in mid-air invisible wire and carefully placed Blu-Tack which are meant to make the sculptures look like a balancing act.”  Further Infowww.mise-en.com Bryony Stone Bryony joined It's Nice That as Deputy Editor in August 2016 She later became Acting Editor at It's Nice That Fancy a bit of It's Nice That in your inbox Sign up to our newsletters and we'll keep you in the loop with everything good going on in the creative world Instagram TikTok LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Pinterest About Careers at It’s Nice That Privacy Policy Insights Residence Creative Lives in Progress If You Could Jobs © It’s Nice That 2024 · Nice Face Logo © It’s Nice That www.mise-en.com sweat and solidarity of musical subculture Owen Harvey’s portraits offer a charming antidote to the negative press garnered by young men Resistance is an exhibition conceived by acclaimed artist and filmmaker Steve McQueen and curated in collaboration with the Turner’s director Clarrie Wallis We spoke to Clarrie about how photography has shaped protest The photographer Ana Flores joined us at April’s Nicer Tuesdays to talk the crowd through her career to date from going with her gut and leaving a background in law to study fashion photography rediscovering her Peruvian roots along the way Ana took us through the process behind some of the projects that have led her to document the indigenous women of her birthplace with a focus on adornment About Contact Advertising Opportunities Newsletters Insights + Opinion Creatives + Projects Advice + Resources Culture + Lifestyle Nicer Tuesdays The View From... POV Forward Thinking Review of the Year Jenny Brewer Olivia Hingley Ellis Tree Elizabeth Goodspeed Liz Gorny Instagram TikTok LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Pinterest Careers at It’s Nice That Privacy Policy Insights Residence Creative Lives in Progress If You Could Jobs "It looks artificial; I see a superhero toy, or maybe a deodorant for men" – Marie Valognes on Hood By Air "A witch at a birthday party" – Marie Valognes on Marc Jacobs "Here, I went for the graphics: vichy patterns and colour combinations, which inspired a 'hairdressing on the kitchen table' composition" – Marie Valognes on Marques'Almeida "I see The Little Mermaid with stripper heels: it's an unexpected combination, reflected in the sculpture with the out-of-place pen caps. Plus, it looks a bit as if the dress is liquid, pouring out onto the body" – Marie Valognes on Versace "It doesn't mean anything in particular in terms of how dangerous it is." Still View more Pictures of the Day Quentin Valognes won the fifth stage of the Tour de l’Abitibi He out-sprinted American rider Peter Coguen (Race CF) and Adrien Carpentier (Team France) to win the 116-km jaunt from Amos to Val d’Or The top placed Canadian was Willem Boersma of Team Canada placing fifth on the stage Full results are available at the Tour de l’Abitibi Unfortunate scramble of the #Abitibi GC after a big crash today, but team USA will keep fighting to the very end! #readyforwar #gladiators — Adrien Costa (@AdrienCosta) July 26, 2014 Bummed to lose the GC lead in a crash. Thanks to my @USACjuniors for protecting me the last two days — Will Barta (@will_barta) July 26, 2014 Back-to-back wins for TNN’s @QuentinValognes at @TourAbitibi! #DiabetesEmpowered (Photo: © Christian Leduc) pic.twitter.com/5FHjdaBcay — Team Novo Nordisk (@teamnovonordisk) July 27, 2014 Get the digital edition of Canadian Cycling Magazine Δdocument.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value" “I put pressure on myself to do better every season,” explains Marie Valognes the artist who has been transforming our favourite runway looks into abstract sculptures over recent seasons “I don’t know if I succeed but I do think I’m getting better at moulding and modifying existing objects into the feel I want and I was able to incorporate this newly acquired technique this season.” While for Autumn/Winter 2016 rubber gloves became a Comme des Garçons showpiece and a bottle of handsoap suddenly bore resemblance to a pastel Versace number this season Maison Margiela’s headpieces were fashioned from “pickled ginger from my local Chinese shop on Kingsland Road – it looks like a piece of skin and seemed a good match as the colour palette makes me think of a vegan meal,” and a sprig of hay became Prada’s marabou feathers and it can take a few goes before I feel I got it right but the process is made easier with an idea,” she explains “Fendi was the hardest because it’s simple and at first I couldn’t decode it and I eventually started seeing it differently I see them all as little sculptures or artistic compositions now.” Here her enchantingly deconstructed realisations prove this method to be a resounding success “Silky graphic lines interrupted by a stain and clashing shoes; it unusually combines both cute and punk” – Marie Valognes on Fendi “When squinting it looks like a bunch of dusty roses” – Marie Valognes on J.W.Anderson and my abstract interpretation of it” – Marie Valognes on Marc Jacobs “Here’s a Scottish skirt you could potentially fly with and decided to concentrate on the mechanics rather than just use tartan” – Marie Valognes on Comme des Garçons “To me this is ‘Greek patio meets African hut’” – Marie Valognes on Prada “This is what happens when your cat plays with your stuff” – Marie Valognes on Rick Owens the internet is awash with imagery of seasonal collections saturated with catwalk shots and backstage beauty pictures artist and photographer Marie Valognes has refreshed our waning engagement with her brilliantly witty interpretations of some of our favourite shows under her pseudonym mise en – turning a Turkish sausage (courtesy of Dalston's TFC) into a Vetements look dried algae (from Big Sur) into Yohji Yamamoto "I got the idea last season," she explains though there isn't always a way to find room for them It’s interesting for me to make these visual associations in objects.. they sort of bounce off each other and in this case it’s particularly fun to do and share." they remind me of accessories to wash with." – Marie Valognes on Gucci waxy drippings of a candle become the raw-edged denim ruffles at Marques'Almeida its marbled hues strangely synonymous with the collection's distressed fabrication "I was inspired by the outfit's deconstruction and the fabric breaking away," explains Valognes who later found her inspiration for Yamamoto in the natural world "the elements of the whole look seemed to all be part of each other like a whole sentence expressed with just the one symbol" – and somehow her transformation of the Japanese master's harmonious punk poetics into seaweed worked perfectly and the fabric breaking away." – Marie Valognes on Marques'Almeida The materials and colours at Gucci reminded her of "accessories to wash with" and so Alessandro Michele's delicate pastel lace became deconstructed loofahs while Noir Kei Ninomiya's mix of materials evoked "the end of a dinner So the still life translation is more abstract and random." Ultimately the series instructs us to look differently at the images and garments which already seem familiar – and turning an asymmetric Vetements sleeve into a Turkish sausage is some excellent light relief amidst the hard-talking fashion commentary "It’s like what happens at the end of a dinner So the still life translation is more abstract/random." – Marie Valogneson on Noir Kei Neinomiya "The elements of the whole look seemed to all be part of each other like a whole sentence expressed with just the one symbol." – Marie Valognesonon on Yohji Yamamoto I was inspired by the contrast between the top and bottom and the oddity of the one sleeve doing it’s own thing independently from the rest of the top." – Marie Valogneson on Vetements There has a been a growing tendency among young designers to do away with the traditional runway show completely Whether choosing impressively realised presentations intimate showings for editors behind closed doors or one-off printed publications as alternative ways to communicate their work it is an approach both imaginative and pragmatic London-based Katie Roberts-Wood is one such designer For her latest collection under eponymous label ROBERTS | WOOD to interpret her clothing in a way entirely of their choosing: Bex Day undertook a live photoshoot; the collective Crown and Owls imagined an immersive known for her whimsical approach to sculpture under the pseudonym ‘mise en’ created pieces inspired by Roberts-Woods’ approach to the creative process “For a while now we’ve been experimenting with different things or catwalk shows before that,” Roberts-Wood tells AnOther “Getting into that trap of a standard way of showing doesn’t really interest me – I’d rather push trying different things I think it can feel quite restricting if you get into this cycle of having to show in a certain way every season.” Perhaps the most interesting – or at least obscure, in that the final images do not feature a single garment – are the sculptures by Valognes, who Roberts-Wood discovered via Instagram Valognes’ pieces – which often use disparate items (previous creations have used a Turkish sausage among other things) – are idiosyncratic interpretations of what she sees around her Often, her sculptures find their starting point in looks from fashion shows – Valognes created such a series for AnOther – where the marabou trim of a Prada outfit might be made from hay or the ruffles of a Molly Goddard gown are evoked in the undone blue netting of a shower poof Her work delights in the freedom of pure association “I tend to make visual connections when looking at forms,” she previously told AnOther Valognes took an altogether more abstract approach – invited into the ROBERTS | WOOD studio she was fascinated not with the final garments but the oftentimes intricate processes behind them she and and Roberts-Wood found common ground – the latter who studied medicine for ten years before undertaking an MA at London’s Royal College of Art trial-and-error approach (her graduate collection was made with the challenge that it should not contain a single seam) “I don’t tend to start out with a theme or a moodboard or anything,” Roberts-Wood says “I think part of that is my background – I wasn’t actually trained in design so I feel like I missed out on that ‘the way you’re supposed to put a collection together’ thing.” The result is a series of sculptures that become a portrait of a designer’s creative process crumpled pieces of pattern paper or folds of tulle are delicately balanced on polystyrene balls or shards of concrete to become visualisations of Roberts-Wood’s mind “I feel like it took a bit of a life of its own which is what I was hoping for; I was hoping people would run with it,” Roberts-Wood says “I think she certainly recognised the really important things in the process about like making and the experimentation but visually took it in her own direction and presented them in this really different way.” which Roberts-Wood and her team are currently finishing the production run for for stores that include London’s Dover Street Market became a study in the subversive power of cuteness The designer was initially delighted by iridescent fabrics she found which reminded of the surreal colours found in nature (“we call one the jellyfish dress,” she says) especially with using ruffles and bows and things of these traditionally cute emblems as a protective evolutionary mechanism – how it can be an advantage either in nature or in life.” “It’s like the set of characteristics that you might find in a baby animal and it’s actually a mechanism that they’re using to make sure they’re protected,” she says “I just like this idea that it’s slightly… manipulative.” By ROSS IBBETSON FOR MAILONLINE Stunning before and after images show how northern France has recovered from the months-long battles which followed D-Day when Allied bombardments and paratroopers forced the Nazis out as Allied forces fought to wrest France from Nazi control the region's towns and beaches are startlingly calm as still-grateful residents prepare to welcome veterans commemorating 75 years since D-Day British and Canadian warships lined up along the Normandy shore German anti-tank obstacles packed the broad beaches a grassy knoll blends gently into the wide beach Two tourists stand alone on the vast expanse The battle for Normandy took two-and-a-half more months the code name for the Allied invasion at the Normandy coast in France during WWII The operation divided the Normandy beaches into five sections for their landings on June 6 Opposing the landings were 12,000 German soldiers who inflicted heavy casualties on the Americans landing their Heavier than expected defences caused severe difficulties at Omaha and surviving bands of men were only able to penetrate by improvised assaults in scaling the bluffs The ruins in the town of Valognes on October 7 The townspeople were woken by the thunder of aircraft on the night of June 5 as bombs began to rain down It was considered a vital position for the advancing troops to take out on their way to the strategic site of Cherbourg When it was liberated at the end of the month it had been reduced to rubble and hundreds lost their lives The town was horrifically damaged in the fighting which took place in the Allied assault Much of the town caught fire marking out the town brightly for the descending paratroopers but some were caught in the flames while others were ripped apart by bullets when their parachutes were tangled in trees and poles The incident was portrayed in the film 'The Longest Day' troops passing through the town of Sainte-Marie-du-Mont as they push forward in France June 1944 - the town was the scene of a ferocious engagement between the American 101st Airborne Division and the German Wehrmacht on D-Day Sixty German soldiers from the 191 Artillery Regiment used the church as an observation tower The Airborne Division parachuted in to clear the way for the advancement from Utah Beach many faces bullets as soon as they touched the ground when they parachuted directly into the town centre An American soldier and a French civilian speaking on the causeway leading from the mainland of Brittany to the famous tourist resort of Mont-St-Michel in Normandy - as the allies poured onto the beaches they squeezed the Germans into Brittany with some showing up in bare feet at Mont-St-Michel Germans who remained their became trapped and with the arrival of American tanks they stood no chance In August the Americans rolled in and the SS paratroopers walked out with their hands on their helmets Putrefied corpses once scattered the streets of the town of Saint-Lo soldiers watched out from a makeshift trench that rubble is the rebuilt Saint-Lo Church The Allies liberated one of France's most striking monuments Much of the architectural damage to Normandy came not from Nazi occupation but from Allied bombings Soldiers placed a steel beam across a ditch in Pont-L'Eveque to walk past the 15th century St its lonely arches leading to nowhere after their surrounding walls collapsed neatly trimmed hedges line the polished stone walls of the restored monument The flag-covered body of an officer identified only as 'Major Aowie' resting amid the ruins of St Croix Church as two of his men man a machine gun in a bomb crater in the foreground The first airstrikes on the town killed as many as 800 civilians and the bombardments continued for weeks in taking out the power plant and rail station It was a major hub for transport and also suffered German air raids after the Americans moved in The Irish novelist Samuel Beckett called it 'The Capital of Ruins' A British soldier walking in the streets of captured Argentan The city was almost completely destroyed during the battle It was battered by bombing raids by B-17 and B-24 bombers of the US Eighth Air Force who took out its train station After being left in ruins it was further destroyed by the battle of the Argentan-Falaise Pocket two months later but the Americans were successful in liberating the city British soldiers marching past the ruins of a church as they follow the retreating German forces through the war-damaged town of Pont-L'Eveque The 13th (Lancashire) Parachute Regiment had speedily capture their objectives in the town on landing but eventually became entrenched the regiment were ordered to force their way through the and cross the River Touques on the outskirts of town They had been halted by a fire raging through the town and when it died down they made their move In the end they were forced to withdraw and commended for their abilities in using a single rope to cross over a river out of the city and eventually rejoin the advance to the Seine Inhabitants of La Haye Du Puits in Normandy The important inland crossroads town was surrounded by the American VIII Corps in a 15-mile arc from the hills surrounding it It held for five days and managed to retain its old medieval keep in the bombardments Hilaire Church was among the only buildings left standing The surrounding neighbourhood has since revived with tidy brick homes and an insurance office boasting a sign saying 'English spoken.' The bombings sent thousands of residents into hiding After the Nazis were pushed out of La Haye-du-Puits in July 1944 pushing their belongings in wheelbarrows past the blown-out rose windows of the St The church shows little hint of the damage today and well-tended orange and yellow flowers grow along its facade Normandy has been buffeted by battles since Roman times and soldiers marching through Sainte-Marie-du-Mont in 1944 saw a reminder of that troubled past: a monument to townsmen killed in World War I the monument has been updated to honour those killed in the Second World War What's striking is how the French and the rest of .. The comments below have not been moderated We are no longer accepting comments on this article The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media Group News | Crime Get our award-winning daily news email featuring exclusive stories I would like to be emailed about offers, event and updates from Evening Standard. Read our privacy notice A man who punctured an elderly shopkeeper’s lung in a horrific east London stabbing with the help of two teenage boys has been jailed for nine years 70-year-old Suntharalingham Sockalingam, known as Sunny, was in his family-run corner shop in Walthamstow when the hooded trio burst in carrying knives in the attempted robbery The terrified pensioner shielded his wife and two customers while the knife-wielding youngsters attacked him as they tried to raid the store The gang fled empty handed after the father-of-three defended himself and his wife Premala armed with only an advertising stand The shocking incident happened at the corner shop on Carr Road Police and ambulances were called and found Mr Sockalingam suffering from serious stab injuries He was taken to hospital in a critical condition pleaded guilty and has now been jailed for nine years and four months for attempted robbery and wounding with intent as well as for a separate robbery on April 9 were also given youth rehabilitation orders for attempted robbery and threatening a person with a blade/sharply pointed article on April 17 One of the 14-year-olds was given a 24-month order while the other – who was also sentenced for robbery and threatening a person with a blade on April 9 in a separate incident – was given an 18-month order The trio pleaded guilty at Snaresbrook Crown Court on August 8 and were sentenced on Friday Although he has physically recovered from a punctured lung and underwent rehab the Met Police said the psychological impact of the incident continues to haunt him and his family Investigating officer Detective Constable Elle Madden from Waltham Forest CID said: "This was a horrific attack on a hard-working pensioner who was simply trying to run his shop Walthamstow stabbing: friends of shopkeeper stabbed defending his wares blast 'cowards' who attacked him arrested over stabbing of elderly shopkeeper in Walthamstow is knifed while fighting off robbers with sign "The offenders used an extreme level of violence against an elderly man who was trying to defend himself "The attack could have resulted in tragic consequences and it is only through good fortune that the victim is now physically recovering The victim and his family continue to deal with the consequences of this attack "I'd like to thank the victim and his family for their courage in helping us with this investigation and also to the local community for their support which I know has been greatly appreciated by the victim We hope this sentence will give them some peace and closure." Prince Louis steals the show at VE Day parade as he keeps dad William looking sharp and mimics brother George Prince Louis steals show with sweet antics at VE parade VE Day 2025 fashion: best looks from the day VE Day 2025 fashion: Princess of Wales to Lady Victoria Starmer Ukraine 'launches stunning Kursk offensive' in major blow for Putin ahead of Victory Day celebrations Ukraine 'launches stunning Kursk offensive' in blow for Putin UK tourists face major travel shake-up as Dubai airport set to close Royals watch historic flypast as huge crowds turns out for VE Day 80th anniversary  Royals watch historic Red Arrows flypast for VE Day 80th anniversary Hanoi (VNA) - Lovers of literature in Vietnam will have the chance to meet well-known French/Belgian novelist Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt in Hanoi on November 9 During a conference with Vietnamese literary critic Pham Xuan Nguyen Several of his works have been translated into Vietnamese by Nha Nam Publishing house They include Oscar and the Lady in Pink and Concerto to the Memory of an Angel The latter won him the Goncourt Prize in 2010 he became a jury member of the Goncourt Prize Eric-Emmanuel Schmitt is a French and Belgian dramatist Twenty years after his first play La Nuit de Valognes (Night in Valognes) His plays have been staged in over fifty countries and translated into forty languages Schmitt was awarded the Grand Prize of the Theatre of the French Academy Schmitt has written a number of successful novels and short stories.-VNA Vietnam currently ranks fifth among Asian U23 teams information and models of 87 Buddhist national treasures currently preserved in museums and relic sites across the country are on display The New Zealand Herald has run an article by journalist Cath Johnsen affirming that Vietnam offers one of the kindest cultures in the world held in celebration of the 75th anniversary of Vietnam–Hungary diplomatic ties aimed to strengthen connections between young overseas Vietnamese in Hungary and their cultural roots The exhibition features a dome made from do (poonah paper) combined with recycled plastic and steel to create a space that is both soft and strong The International Martial Arts Tournament welcomed participants from 11 African countries that are part of the African Vovinam – Viet Vo Dao Confederation alongside representatives from several European nations and Vietnam Deputy Minister of Culture of Venezuela Alí Alejandro Primera will perform renowned songs praising President Ho Chi Minh during an art programme titled “Forever Ho Chi Minh” on the occasion of his 135th birthday (May 19 The oil on canvas "Property of a Lady of Title" was the top-selling item at Sloane Street Auctions on May 2 and marked the first Vietnamese artwork ever auctioned at the house Vietnam will be one of 11 hosts of the AFC Asian U23 Cup 2026 qualification Coach Nguyen Dinh Hoang of Vietnam will bring 14 players who have practised hard at intensive training courses and friendlies in Vietnam and Japan to China for the AFC Women’s Futsal Asian Cup 2025 The Berlin exhibition presents a chronological narrative of the war through the eyes of artists and photographers who lived through or deeply studied the war from the early days of revolutionary movement to the great victory on April 30 Ha Long Carnival 2025 unfolded in three acts each weaving Quang Ninh’s cultural heritage into a vivid tapestry of performance The elaborately choreographed performances captured the spirit of local residents invited attendees to explore the locality's breathtaking natural beauty themed “Unity and Inclusivity for Human Dignity: Buddhist Insights for World Peace and Sustainable Development,” will take place in Ho Chi Minh City from May 6 to 8 expected to draw 1,200 delegates from 85 countries and territories Hanoi has mobilised hundreds of billions of VND for the restoration preservation and promotion of local cultural heritage every year transforming the treasures into engines for sustainable tourism development and Tourism Suansavanh Viyaket emphasised that the victory on April 30 was not only a triumph for the army and people of Vietnam but also a shared victory for the united forces and the special combat alliance between Laos and Vietnam not only won the final stage of the 37th National HTV Cycling Cup which concluded on April 30 in Ho Chi Minh City but also secured his place as the overall champion of the prestigious tournament The oil on canvas "Property of a Lady of Title" will be the first Vietnamese artwork on auction at this distinguished auction house It was on display at a solo exhibition of Vu Cao Dam in London in 1960 hosted by the prominent Frost & Reed Gallery titled “Mua xuan thong nhat” (the spring of reunification) serves as a profound tribute to previous generations soldiers and civilians who made great sacrifices for the country’s freedom and independence The exhibition showcases 42 photographs and propaganda posters created by Cuban artists reflecting Cuba’s heartfelt solidarity with Vietnam during its prolonged struggle for national defence The drone show is a highlight of the festivities commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Liberation of the South and National Reunification (April 30 2008 by the Ministry of Information and Communications Email: vietnamplus@vnanet.vn Reproduction in any form is prohibited without written consent In a momentous acquisition that has captured the attention of fans and admirers alike renowned French author Aurélie Valognes has recently purchased the former residence of the legendary Jane Birkin in Lannilis Situated in the picturesque village of Prat-Ar-Coum this charming property has long been a symbol of tranquility and elegance in the heart of Brittany The passing of Jane Birkin in July 2023 marked the end of an era for fans of the iconic singer and actress Birkin was not only a beloved figure in the world of music and film but also a passionate admirer of the natural beauty of Brittany Her connection to the region was further solidified by her ownership of the stunning neo-Norman house in Lannilis where she found solace and inspiration amidst the verdant landscapes and peaceful waters of the Aber Benoît With the purchase of Jane Birkin’s former home Aurélie Valognes has embarked on a new chapter in her own life and career As a celebrated author whose works have touched the hearts of readers around the world Valognes brings a unique perspective and creative energy to the storied walls of « Kachalou Renaming the residence « La maison des écrivaines » Valognes pays homage to the legacy of literary excellence and artistic expression that both she and Birkin embody The decision to acquire Birkin’s former home was not taken lightly by Valognes who expressed deep admiration for the late singer’s talent and influence Valognes shared her excitement at the prospect of creating new memories and stories within the walls of this historic property « Jane Birkin was a true icon of French culture and I am honored to follow in her footsteps as the new custodian of this beautiful home As Valognes settles into her new abode in Lannilis she is undoubtedly inspired by the rich history and artistic spirit that permeates every corner of the house and breathtaking views of the Aber Benoît provide the perfect backdrop for moments of reflection and creativity the house represents not only a physical space but also a sanctuary where ideas can flourish and stories can come to life Aurélie Valognes has captivated readers with her poignant storytelling With the acquisition of Jane Birkin’s former home Valognes has found a new muse and source of inspiration to fuel her creative endeavors The legacy of Birkin’s artistry and passion lives on in the walls of « La maison des écrivaines As fans and admirers eagerly await the next chapter in Aurélie Valognes’s literary journey one thing is certain: the spirit of Jane Birkin and the beauty of Lannilis will forever be intertwined in the legacy of « Kachalou