Jean-Maxime Claude (1968–), French, Emerging from the Brussels art scene in the late 1990s, this multidisciplinary creator defies easy categorization, weaving together performance, installation, and conceptual photography with a wry, often unsettling humor. Their work thrives on the tension between the mundane and the absurd—think office supplies reconfigured into cryptic totems or bureaucratic paperwork transformed into fragile, poetic artifacts. Claude’s practice interrogates systems of control, whether institutional or self-imposed, with a lightness that belies its sharp critique. Influenced as much by Dadaist irreverence as by the dry wit of Magritte, their pieces often hinge on wordplay or deliberate misdirection. A recurring motif is the body—fragmented, obscured, or rendered absurd—exploring how identity fractures under societal expectations. Early performances in abandoned administrative buildings, where Claude enacted meaningless rituals with deadpan precision, earned cult recognition in European experimental circles. Later gallery works retained that subversive edge, using mirrors, red tape, and eerily vacant spaces to unsettle viewers’ sense of agency. Though less concerned with traditional aesthetics than with destabilizing perception, their installations possess a meticulous, almost obsessive craftsmanship. This duality—chaos contained within rigid structures—mirrors the themes of constraint and rebellion that haunt their oeuvre. While not a household name, Claude’s influence lingers in younger artists who blend conceptual rigor with dark comedy.