Artist JR, ‘French Banksy’ creates ‘cave’ installation over Paris’ oldest bridge

The oldest bridge in Paris looked on Thursday as if it had been swallowed by a mountain. The transformation is the work of JR, the street artist known as the “French Banksy,” who this week began inflating a giant artificial “cave” over the Pont Neuf, turning the 17th-century bridge that has carried Parisians across the Seine for more than 400 years into a rocky illusion rising over the river.
JR has said the idea of La Caverne du Pont Neuf, is to bring “mineral and nature” back to the heart of the city. He says he is not covering the bridge so much as revealing the stone taken from limestone quarries from which Paris itself was cut.
A jagged mass of gray rock now seems to rise over its arches. From downstream, the landmark appears to have vanished beneath a prehistoric cliff, its stone openings transformed into dark cave mouths above the water.
“I thought, ‘Where has the bridge gone?’” said Marie Leclerc, 62, who stopped on the quay on her way to work. “It’s strange because you know it’s fabric and air, but from here it really looks like stone. Paris feels suddenly ancient again.”
The inflation, carried out overnight after being delayed by bad weather, is the most dramatic stage yet of a project more than a year in the making.
“It’s a gigantic puzzle that has just been finished,” JR told The Associated Press at the bridge as his team prepared to pump in the air. “We’re going to send air inside, and all these rocks will rise into the Paris sky, almost 18 metres high. Once they’re inflated, they stay.”
One of the most ambitious public artworks Paris has seen in decades — funded by the sale of JR’s work and a handful of corporate partners — it does not open to the public until June 6.
The transformation has been documented by the AP since March with time-lapse cameras, including one fixed on a rooftop terrace high above the river, watching the bridge slowly disappear day by day.















