In this selection of more intimate-format works, Daniel Daviau pursues a delicate line of inquiry: granting animals an emotional presence that transcends their naturalistic depiction. The artist studies posture, the tilt of a head, the curvature of a back or a limb as gestures capable of conveying the humanity that seems to reside within them. These sculptures are not anthropomorphic in the strict sense; they remain fully animal, yet carry within them an added spiritual resonance — an inner vibration that Daviau reveals with great subtlety.
Each piece appears to capture a suspended moment: an animal waiting, watching, hesitating, or contemplating. These attitudes, typically associated with human behaviour, here become a universal language. Daviau sculpts this fine threshold between instinct and emotion, offering his subjects a renewed dignity, almost meditative in nature. They are beings that breathe, perhaps even think, and whose presence invites the viewer to approach and perceive the energy contained within their volumes.
Together, these works form a silent yet deeply expressive bestiary, in which each animal becomes a mirror of our own inner states. They remind us that sculpture can serve as a passage — a space through which the soul moves, discreet yet perceptible. By infusing his animals with subtle emotional nuances, Daviau reveals what we share with them: a fragility, a presence in the world, an intimate movement that at times is best conveyed without words.