Saype
Saype (born Guillaume Legros; 17 February 1989) is a French land artist based in Bulle, Switzerland, known for producing large-scale ephemeral frescoes painted directly onto natural surfaces such as grass, snow, sand, and earth using a biodegradable paint composed of water, chalk, charcoal, and casein.[1][2] Self-taught after beginning with graffiti as a teenager, Saype's works emphasize themes of human unity, mutual aid, and impermanence, fading naturally due to environmental factors like grass growth, weather, and foot traffic, which underscores their temporary nature akin to Buddhist mandalas.[3][2] His artistic practice represents a modern evolution of land art, prioritizing eco-responsibility and social messaging over permanence, with pieces often viewed from aerial perspectives via drones or beacons incorporating augmented reality for extended engagement.[2][3] Among his most significant achievements is the "Beyond Walls" series, launched in 2019, which symbolically creates the world's largest human chain through interconnected hand motifs spanning over 19 locations across continents, including Paris near the Eiffel Tower, Geneva, Berlin for the 30th anniversary of the Wall's fall, New York at the United Nations, Venice during the Biennale, and others like Cape Town and Tokyo, promoting global solidarity.[4][2] Earlier milestones include the 10,000-square-meter fresco "Qu’est-ce qu’un grand homme?" in Leysin in 2016—the largest grass painting at the time—and collaborations such as the SOS Méditerranée project in Geneva in 2018, viewed by an estimated 120 million people.[4][2] Saype's innovations earned recognition from Forbes as one of the 30 most influential young artists under 30 in 2019 and commendation from Swiss President Doris Leuthard in 2017 for his social vision, alongside exhibitions at venues like the Urban Art Fair in Paris and the Musei Reali in Turin.[2][3]Personal Background
Early Life and Graffiti Origins
Guillaume Legros, known professionally as Saype, was born in 1989 in Belfort, France, a city in the eastern region near the Swiss border.[2] He grew up in the nearby rural village of Évette-Salbert, where his mother worked as an x-ray technician in a hospital and his father was employed in information technology.[5] Legros reports having no exposure to museums or art exhibitions during his childhood, describing his early environment as one focused on personal expression rather than formal cultural institutions.[5] As a self-taught artist, Legros began experimenting with graffiti around age 13, initially spray-painting on tennis court walls and abandoned rural buildings.[5] He cited the activity as providing an "adrenalin kick" and a means of asserting presence in society, reflecting a youthful drive for rebellion and visibility in his countryside surroundings.[5] By age 14, he had committed more seriously to graffiti as his primary artistic outlet, drawing on early interests in history, philosophy, and human themes without structured training.[6] At age 18, while in high school philosophy class, Legros developed his pseudonym "Saype" by combining doodled letters to form a contraction of "say" and "peace," symbolizing expression and pacifism—elements he incorporated into his early tags.[5] This marked a shift toward thematic consistency in his work. By age 16, he had already secured his first gallery exhibition, demonstrating rapid progression from illicit street practice to recognized display.[6] These formative experiences in graffiti laid the groundwork for his later evolution into large-scale, ephemeral land art, emphasizing impermanence and accessibility over urban permanence.[5]Relocation and Professional Evolution
In the mid-2010s, Legros transitioned from balancing a nursing career with artistic pursuits to dedicating himself fully to art, prompted by personal and professional crossroads. Having commuted from his home in Belfort, France, to Switzerland for nursing work over approximately three years, he met his future wife during this period, which influenced his decision to relocate permanently.[6] He married and settled in Bulle, Switzerland, around 2017, marking a shift from his French roots to a base conducive to larger-scale endeavors.[6] This move aligned with his growing experimentation in land art, as Switzerland's landscapes offered opportunities for expansive, site-specific works.[4] Professionally, Legros's evolution accelerated post-relocation, evolving from self-taught graffiti roots—begun at age 14 with gallery exhibitions by 16—to pioneering ephemeral grass paintings using self-invented biodegradable materials starting in 2013.[7] By 2015, he executed his first major grass fresco, a 1,400 m² work in the French Alps, followed by a 10,000 m² piece in Leysin, Switzerland, in 2016, signaling his pivot to monumental, environmentally integrated art.[7][4] Abandoning nursing after nearly seven years of dual roles, he embraced full-time artistry around this time, supported by his wife's encouragement during his career deliberations.[8] This phase solidified his focus on ultra-realistic, temporary installations that blend human forms with natural terrains, expanding from studio canvases to global land art interventions.[7][4] His Swiss residency facilitated collaborations and exhibitions in both countries, with works like the 2018 Geneva project underscoring his adaptation to alpine environments while maintaining a humanistic, ecological ethos.[4] By 2019, this professional maturation culminated in ambitious series such as Beyond Walls, comprising 15,000 m² frescoes, reflecting a refined technique prioritizing ephemerality and public engagement over permanence.[4] Legros's trajectory thus embodies a deliberate progression from urban graffiti's illegality to sanctioned, biodegradable land art that critiques societal disconnection through visible, fading narratives.[7]Artistic Methodology
Invention and Composition of Biodegradable Materials
Saype, whose real name is Guillaume Legros, invented a biodegradable paint specifically for his land art to ensure environmental compatibility and ephemerality. Beginning in 2012, he dedicated three years to research and experimentation, initially testing simple mixtures like flour and water pastes in his parents' garden before refining a formula that adhered to grass without causing harm.[9][5] This self-developed medium allowed him to scale up temporary murals on natural surfaces, fading naturally through grass regrowth and weathering within about a month.[10] The paint's composition relies on 100% natural, non-toxic elements: water as the primary solvent, chalk for white pigmentation, charcoal or coal for black tones, and casein—a protein derived from milk—as a binder to ensure adhesion and durability during application.[11][12] These ingredients are mixed into a sprayable or brushable emulsion, avoiding synthetic chemicals or persistent pollutants.[8] Saype applies it directly to mown grass using stencils and manual techniques, leveraging the medium's biodegradability to integrate the artwork into the ecosystem rather than dominating it.[13] This invention stemmed from Saype's transition from traditional graffiti to ecologically sensitive practices, prioritizing materials that decompose harmlessly and underscore his themes of transience. Independent verification of the formula's safety comes from its use in public spaces like parks and festivals without reported environmental incidents, though exact proportions remain proprietary to the artist.[14][15]Process of Site Selection and Execution
Saype selects sites for his artworks based on their historical or symbolic significance, ensuring the location aligns with the thematic message of each piece, such as unity or solidarity.[2] He prioritizes natural environments like grassy fields, hillsides, mountains, deserts, beaches, or parks that facilitate large-scale application and are best viewed from aerial perspectives, often drones.[2][4] For projects like Beyond Walls, sites are chosen across continents to form a conceptual human chain, with locations such as the Pyramids of Giza selected to evoke eternity and contrast the ephemerality of the art.[4] The execution process begins with site preparation, including cutting grass to an extra short length to prolong the artwork's visibility before natural regrowth.[10] Saype employs a custom biodegradable paint formulated from natural ingredients, primarily water, chalk, charcoal, and casein (milk protein), which he developed to minimize environmental impact.[2] Application involves using a paint gun to spray large quantities of the pigment onto the prepared surface, enabling coverage of vast areas ranging from 1,000 to 18,000 square meters.[4][10] To achieve precise composition, he places paper squares on the ground as "pixels" to map the design, incorporating physical traces like grass or sand for texture.[2] The works are designed to fade naturally within two weeks to one month due to grass growth, weather, or other environmental factors, emphasizing their temporary nature without requiring removal.[10]
Major Projects
Beyond Walls Global Chain
The Beyond Walls project, launched by Saype in 2019, consists of a series of large-scale land art murals depicting interlaced hands to symbolically form the world's longest human chain, intended to transcend geographical and mental barriers while promoting global solidarity.[16] Each installation uses eco-responsible, biodegradable paints applied directly to natural surfaces such as grass, sand, or rubble, ensuring the works are temporary and integrate with the environment.[16] The project originated with the goal of spanning multiple continents through sequential "steps," with the artist selecting sites for their cultural or symbolic significance.[17] The inaugural step occurred in Paris, France, in June 2019, where a 15,000 m² fresco of hands was painted on grass in the Champ de Mars at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, supporting the humanitarian organization SOS Méditerranée.[18] [16] Subsequent 2019 installations followed in Andorra la Vella (3,500 m²), Geneva, Switzerland (5,000 m² in Parc des Bastions), and Berlin, Germany (4,000 m²), establishing the chain's early European links.[16] By 2020, the project expanded to Africa and the Middle East with steps in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso (5,000 m² on laterite soil), Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire (the largest at 18,000 m² on grass), Turin, Italy (6,400 m²), and Istanbul, Turkey (6,300 m²).[16] [19] Further progression included 2021 works in Cape Town, South Africa (6,000 m²), Ouidah, Benin (1,000 m² on sand), and Dubai and Liwa, UAE, before continuing to Venice, Italy; Belfast, Northern Ireland (10,800 m²); and Rio de Janeiro and Brumadinho, Brazil in 2022.[16] The chain extended to Asia in 2023 with installations near Mount Fuji, Japan (3,000 m²), Montreal, Canada (4,900 m²), and Hatay, Turkey (750 m² on earthquake rubble to honor victims).[16] In 2024, steps reached Cairo, Egypt (900 m² on sand near the Pyramids of Giza) and Vilnius, Lithuania (1,400 m²), marking the 21st installation as of September 2024.[16]| Step | Location | Year | Surface Area (m²) | Surface Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Paris, France | 2019 | 15,000 | Grass |
| 6 | Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire | 2020 | 18,000 | Grass |
| 14 | Belfast, Northern Ireland | 2022 | 10,800 | Grass |
| 21 | Vilnius, Lithuania | 2024 | 1,400 | Grass |
Standalone and Collaborative Installations
Saype's standalone and collaborative installations encompass ephemeral grass artworks distinct from the interconnected Beyond Walls chain, frequently partnering with institutions or localities to underscore themes of environmental stewardship, human resilience, and visionary futures. These pieces, executed with biodegradable paints, vary in scale from 1,000 to 12,000 square meters and biodegrade naturally within weeks, emphasizing impermanence.[21][22][23] The "Trash" series, launched in 2019, critiques pollution through hyper-realistic depictions of waste. A inaugural 1,000 m² installation in Bagenelle, France, portrayed discarded trash to highlight societal impacts without environmental harm.[24] Subsequent works include a colossal plastic bottle along Lake Geneva's shore in Lausanne, Switzerland, in 2023, illustrating waste persistence, and tin cans styled as straw bales in Valensole, France, for the same series.[25][26] These standalone efforts use land art to provoke reflection on consumerism.[21] In response to the COVID-19 crisis, Saype produced "Beyond Crisis" in Leysin, Switzerland, in April 2020, covering 3,000 m² with an image of a girl encircled by a hand-drawn chain dance, symbolizing hope and unity.[27][28] This standalone piece, visible primarily from aerial views, aimed to inspire optimism during lockdowns.[29] The "World in Progress" triptych, collaboratively realized with the United Nations, envisions children's blueprints for an ideal world. The initial 6,000 m² fresco at UN Geneva headquarters in 2020 depicted two children collaboratively drawing.[22] "World in Progress II," unveiled at UN New York in September 2021 over 11,000 m², reinforced intergenerational duties.[30] The concluding "World in Progress III" in 2022 completed the series, tracing iterative world-building.[31] "Bridges?" (2024), commissioned for Fribourg Tourisme's 125th anniversary, spans 12,000 m² near the Saane River in Fribourg, Switzerland, portraying a boy constructing a bridge as a metaphor for transcending cultural divides like Switzerland's Röstigraben.[23][32] This collaborative installation, painted August 16, 2024, integrates local geography with broader solidarity messages.[33] Additional collaborations include "Un jeu d'enfant," a 3,500 m² fresco in Annet-sur-Marne, France, in partnership with ECT and the municipality, advancing humanist and ecological motifs.[34] Early works, such as a 2019 piece at the ArtiChoke festival, experimented with grass painting techniques in controlled settings.[35]Philosophical and Thematic Focus
Humanist Ideals of Solidarity and Fragility
Saype's artworks frequently embody humanist ideals by depicting interconnected human figures, particularly through interlocking hands that symbolize solidarity and mutual support across diverse populations. In the Beyond Walls project, initiated in 2019, these motifs form the world's largest symbolic human chain, spanning multiple continents and emphasizing collective action against global challenges.[4] The artist has stated, "I am deeply convinced that it is together that humanity will be able to face the various challenges it must overcome," underscoring a philosophy rooted in unity and shared responsibility.[4] This theme of solidarity extends to promotions of peace and dialogue, as seen in installations like World in Progress at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva and New York in 2021, where images of children playing evoke hope for intergenerational harmony. Saype explicitly aligns his work with values of peace and solidarity, noting, "Through my work I promote values such as peace and solidarity, and these are values I share with the UN."[1] Such depictions advocate for transcending geographical and cultural barriers through empathetic connection.[4] Complementing solidarity, Saype incorporates fragility to highlight the vulnerability of human societies and the environment. His ephemeral frescoes, crafted from biodegradable chalk and charcoal on natural surfaces like grass and sand, naturally degrade within days or weeks, mirroring the transient nature of peace and unity.[1] This deliberate impermanence captures "the fragility of our societies and the challenges we are all called to face," as the artist describes, urging viewers to reflect on imperiled bonds before they vanish.[4] By design, these works prioritize mindset shifts over permanence, reinforcing that fragile alliances require active preservation.[4]Environmental Symbolism and Ephemerality
Saype's artworks incorporate environmental symbolism by employing biodegradable paints made from natural components such as chalk, coal, casein, and water, applied to organic surfaces like grass or snow. This methodology ensures the pieces degrade harmlessly, leaving no lasting ecological footprint and exemplifying non-invasive art that harmonizes with nature.[36][37] The choice of living canvases further emphasizes humanity's reliance on the environment, promoting awareness of sustainability without permanent alteration to landscapes.[38] The ephemerality of these frescoes, which endure for mere days to weeks before dissipating through grass regrowth, rainfall, or sunlight, symbolizes the inherent fragility of life, connections, and environmental balance. Saype intentionally designs this transience to evoke reflection on impermanence, stating that "our lives and our actions are destined to become traces of our passage in this world, it is ours to know what to do with."[36] This fading process mirrors broader ecological vulnerabilities, urging immediate stewardship and action against degradation, as the art's disappearance reinforces that opportunities for positive impact are fleeting.[5] In projects such as "World in Progress III" (2022), executed on a 7,200 m² grass expanse at the UN headquarters in Nairobi, Kenya, Saype integrates these elements to convey intergenerational responsibility. Depicting children's visions of an ideal future, the work uses biodegradable media to highlight duties toward peace and planetary preservation, with its inevitable erasure underscoring the need to safeguard fragile ecosystems for succeeding generations.[39][1]