The thousands of tiles that adorn the walls of the Concorde station are not random. This is one of the pieces of information revealed by Bertrand Lambert in this issue of Parigo Express.
Even though these letters may seem randomly placed, they do have a meaning. It is not a secret code or a crossword puzzle, but a text that reproduces exactly the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen written in 1789.
This vast project was initiated in 1989 on the occasion of the bicentennial of the French Revolution and is credited to Françoise Schein, an artist committed to the fight for human rights. To pique the curiosity of travelers, she simply decided to remove spaces and punctuation between words, giving the sensation of a uniform block.
The walls of the Concorde station are covered with 44,000 letters. To learn more, the Parigo dedicated to the most beautiful metro stations is available on our platform france.tv/idf. Can you please rewrite this sentence?
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