France’s Minister of Culture and Communication honoured Nelly Saunier as a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in 2008.
In the quiet village of Sucy-en-Brie, perched within the arm of a grand oak tree, a defining silence once occurred between a young girl and a yellow Serin. The bird, hopping along a branch, left behind a single feather—a token of a hundred shades of gold, texturized by light. For Nelly Saunier, this was not merely a found object; it was a key. It unlocked a lifelong fascination with the purity of nature, where elegance is innate and deception does not exist.
Today, Saunier stands as a Maître d’Art, a virtuoso of plumasserie (featherwork). Her practice is not simply the arrangement of plumes but a deep, structural investigation into the “world within a world.” While the bird sings a simple life, Saunier extracts from its molted feathers a complexity that transcends the biological, weaving the ephemeral into the permanent realms of haute couture and high jewelry.
Saunier’s approach to the feather is transformative. She does not merely use the material for its decorative softness; she challenges its physical properties. In her collaboration with Jean Paul Gaultier, the feather ceased to be a plume and became a textile. She constructed a parakeet bolero of vibrant rainbow hues and a jacquard sweater that functioned as a trompe-l’oeil. Through precise layering and manipulation, the feathers mimicked the density and texture of wool—”wool with panache,” as she describes it. This is a technical sleight of hand where the viewer is invited to question the very nature of the material before them.
This capacity to alter perception extends into the rigid world of hard luxury. When partnering with Harry Winston, Saunier faced the challenge of marrying the organic fragility of feathers with the cold permanence of metal and stone. The task was to enter the “extraordinarily delicate world of the infinitely small.” Here, the feather does not just adorn; it becomes a structural element of the timepiece or brooch, creating an illusion of life trapped within a jewel. The technique requires adapting the feather’s natural behavior to the constraints of mechanics, preserving its iridescence while ensuring its longevity.
The versatility of Saunier’s craft is further evidenced when she steps away from fashion and enters the domain of interior architecture. In her collaboration with renowned furniture maker Thierry Drevelle, two distinct worlds of marquetry collided: the density of rare exotic woods and the weightlessness of plumage.
This partnership was less about decoration and more about a shared philosophy of conservation. Both artisans work with materials that require a deep understanding of preservation and renewal. The resulting works create a tactile tension—the solid, grounding presence of wood juxtaposed against the fleeting, light-catching quality of feathers. It is an “aesthetic proposal” that had rarely been attempted, forcing both wood and wing to adapt to a new, shared language of design.
Breathing life into these static objects requires more than manual dexterity; it demands a naturalist’s rigor. Saunier’s process begins long before the first feather is cut. “To capture the beauty… you must have a thorough knowledge of our feathered friends,” she asserts.
Her methodology is rooted in observation. She studies how birds navigate the elements—their reaction to wind, the shifting angles of the sun, and the interplay of shadow. This biological understanding informs the artistic execution. Saunier utilizes drawing as a foundational tool, creating diagrams and sketches that map out the composition of the feathers alongside color palettes and fabric swatches. It is a time-consuming synthesis of the mental and the material, where the resonance of colors is calculated with scientific precision before the intuitive work of assembly begins.
Saunier’s career is also a bridge across time. She operates in the shadow of the Golden Age of plumasserie (1860–1914), an era of joie de vivre when the streets of Paris were awash in quilled caps and extravagant poufs. However, the onset of war and financial crises in the 20th century rendered such feathered luxuries obsolete, and the number of active artisan houses dwindled to a handful.
Refusing to let this “ancestral know-how” vanish, Saunier has dedicated herself to transmission. For twenty years, she taught at the Octave Feuillet vocational school in Paris, handpicking apprentices to ensure the rigorous precision of the craft survives. Her efforts were recognized by the French Minister of Culture and Communication, who honored her as a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in 2008 and later as a Maître d’Art.
Her legacy is not static; it travels. From Hollywood concepts for films like Pan to a residency at the Villa Kujoyama in Kyoto, Saunier continues to expand the boundaries of what featherwork can be. In her hands, the feather remains a “world within a world,” an ancient medium constantly reinvented for a modern gaze.
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