The French artist's work features a dual reference to the shaky social landscape. A recurring theme in his work is the use of colors that infuse his creations with a childish notion of a happy, dystopian world. The meaning that emerges from the piece Tu me gonfle, literally "you've bored me," is immediate. The French inscription is rendered in neon and affixed to a structure entirely filled with deflated balloons. In short, one can sense the artist's humorous streak, which, with clever lexical deception, leads us to believe he has anticipated the conceptual connection between the work and the viewer. A mutual dialogue of clichés and social prejudices is insinuated here. It's also possible that alongside this veiled poetics lies the artist's goal of maturation, which seeks to distance himself from a childish construct and therefore abdicates his work in favor of greater freedom of lexical meaning.