Jennifer Caubet
Biography
Jennifer Caubet moves fluidly between sculpture, installation, and drawing, engaging deeply with the relationships between space, architecture, and the human body. Her works are not passive objects but spatial propositions—structures that shape, reconfigure, and sometimes disrupt the environments they inhabit. Influenced by visionary architectural movements such as the Situationist International and Archigram, she approaches architecture as both a social and conceptual tool, using it to question how people navigate and perceive constructed spaces. Her process combines conceptual rigor with a hands-on exploration of materials, employing fabrication methods that allow for precision while embracing adaptability. Many of her works are modular or transformable, designed to be activated through human interaction and to evolve with their surroundings. This capacity for change reflects her idea of “realizable utopias,” in which spatial design becomes an open-ended framework rather than a fixed solution. By merging architectural thought with sculptural form, Caubet creates immersive experiences that challenge the boundaries between art, design, and lived space, inviting viewers to actively engage with the environments she constructs. ...