Original secular stained glass
The Simon-Marq studio makes all kinds of stained glass for corporate and individual clients and collaborates with designers and interior designers.
Previous creations
Agence FAIRE pour Van Cleef & Arpels
Stained glass created for l’agence d’architecture intérieure FAIRE, designed for the Van Cleef & Arpels booth at the Salon de la Haute Horlogerie in Geneva in 2018. The stained glass windows were then displayed at Harrods in London.
Maison Vincent Darré
The interior and furniture designer Vincent Darré commissioned the Atelier Simon-Marq to create the Métropolis stained glass window for his apartment/showroom in Paris, as well as three stained glass panels for the Maison Vincent Darré booth at the AD Intérieurs 2014 fair at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris.
Historic collaborations
Marc Chagall (1887 – 1985) commissioned the Atelier Simon-Marq to produce almost all of his stained glass work, in particular for secular buildings including the Musée du Message Biblique in Nice, the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem, the UN building in New York and the Art Institute in Chicago.
Marc Chagall
Marc Chagall (1887 – 1985) commissioned the Atelier Simon-Marq to produce almost all of his stained glass work, in particular for secular buildings including the Musée du Message Biblique in Nice, the Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem, the UN building in New York and the Art Institute in Chicago.
Joan Miró
Stained glass window created for the Fondation Maeght, the art foundation inaugurated in Saint-Paul de Vence in 1964.
Jacques Simon
Jacques Simon (1890-1974) built the Simon-Marq studio (then called Atelier Jacques Simon) in 1926 in the place it had formerly occupied on the Rue Ponsardin in Reims. Famous for saving the stained glass windows of Reims Cathedral from destruction during the First World War, he restored historic stained glass windows in the Champagne Ardennes region while pursuing a career as a stained-glass designed for secular buildings in Reims including the Café du Palais, the Opera House, the Caisse d’Epargne and the former Conservatoire.