A travel show featuring the Louisiana you won’t read about in tour guides and mainstream travel websites.

An Only in Louisiana Experience: Inside the Enchanted Atelier de la Nature

Dr. Brandon Ballengée, Aurore Ballengée, and their daughter Lily inspect a "bio-artwork" mound featuring several red-and-yellow sculptural mushrooms at Atelier de la Nature.

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In Arnaudville, Louisiana, tucked within the heart of Cajun country in St. Martin Parish, a unique kind of workshop thrives. This is not a place of tools and benches, but of native grasses, sculptural forms, and whispered fairy tales. Atelier de la Nature, French for Nature’s Workshop, is a nature reserve, sculpture garden, and outdoor education center born from a powerful idea that conservation can be inspired through art and direct experience. 

A white banner with the green "Atelier de la Nature" logo stands in front of a white metal building and natural brush.
The entrance to the Atelier de la Nature campus.

Founded in 2017 by artist biologist Dr. Brandon Ballengée, sustainable food educator Aurore Ballengée, and their children Lily and Victor, it represents a family’s commitment to healing old farmland and reconnecting community to the local ecosystem. My visit was a walk through this living, breathing project.

A Walk Into a Collaborative World

Dr. Brandon Ballengée, Aurore Ballengée, and their two children, Lily and Victor, stand together smiling in a field at Atelier de la Nature.
The Ballengée family leads the mission of art and conservation.

Greeted by Brandon, the vision was immediately laid out. We were joined by his wife Aurore, their children, and several of the artists whose work dots the landscape, turning the tour into a communal stroll.

Dr. Brandon Ballengée explains the construction of a large, straw-wrapped sculptural form to Karen LeBlanc on a wooded trail at Atelier de la Nature.
Dr. Ballengée explains mycelium-based art to Karen LeBlanc.

“We’re a nature reserve, a STEM education center and we’re really interested in the way that art and science and nature can be combined together.” – Brandon Ballengée

A large, black, net-like lattice structure is suspended between trees over a leaf-covered forest floor at Atelier de la Nature, with small light bulbs hanging nearby.
An intricate, web-like art installation suspended above a wooded trail.

The property itself tells a story of renewal. The land is a little over 30 acres of former soybean and farm fields actively being restored or “re-natured.” This process is documented scientifically through an annual bioblitz.

A large outdoor metal sculpture featuring various silver insect shapes, including a spider and a beetle, attached to the ends of long, thin metal rods that curve upward like a bouquet from a circular base at Atelier de la Nature.
A creative metal sculpture at the reserve mimics a floral “bloom” of various insects.

“We’ve got almost 400 species now cataloged.” – Brandon Ballengée

The Living Art of the Sculpture Trail

The trail is the heart of the experience, filled with collaborative and often functional artworks. One of the first we encountered was a striking, wrapped form. Brandon explained its innovative nature as a collaboration with artist Crisa Ko, soil scientist Jorge Villa, his son Victor, and All Caps Mushrooms of Lafayette.

Dr. Brandon Ballengée stands behind a circular raised garden bed filled with mulch and decorated with numerous red-and-yellow sculptural mushrooms at Atelier de la Nature.
Dr. Ballengée displays a sculptural “bio-artwork” designed to grow edible mushrooms.

“The interior is a steel frame and then actually mycelium from mushrooms. So edible mushrooms. And then the whole thing is wrapped with straw and woodchips. So the whole thing blossoms mushrooms over time.” – Brandon Ballengée

Dr. Brandon Ballengée stands on a dirt path at Atelier de la Nature next to a large sculptural mushroom cap resting on a black barrel.
Dr. Ballengée showcases sculptural art along the reserve’s educational nature trail.

This “bio artwork” embodies their hybrid mission. Elsewhere, a luminous structure by visiting artist Jamie Grimes, made from 3D printed and corrugated plastic, is designed to slowly expand like clouds through the trees.

A large, informative outdoor sign at Atelier de la Nature features a detailed map of the nature reserve's trails, including the "Cajun" Prairie, Blue Bird Trail, and Coco Rico Forest.
A trail map guiding visitors through the diverse habitats of the 25-acre reserve.

Whimsy, History, and Chicken Proof Art

A playful element of the trail is the search for hidden fairy doors at the bases of trees, a game that engages visitors of all ages.

Whimsical art installations blend with nature throughout the woodland trails

“The legend is there are 20 or 21 of them. Nobody’s ever seen them all. And the other story is, when you leave the forest and you come back, they move.” – Brandon Ballengée

A large, gray, bone-like sculpture of the infamous Magdeburg Siberian unicorn standing among tall trees in a forest at Atelier de la Nature.
“chicken proof” unicorn sculpture represents a famous paleontological hoax.

The art also engages with history and humor. Artist Carrie Hamburg joined us to discuss her piece, a replica of a famous paleontological hoax.

Karen LeBlanc stands beside a tall, gray, skeletal unicorn sculpture in a wooded area, speaking with a man in a black t-shirt at Atelier de la Nature.
Karen LeBlanc explores the “chicken proof” Magdeburg unicorn sculpture.

“This is a replica of the infamous Magdeburg Siberian unicorn, which was an early paleontology effort. Scientists put together bones from cows and whales and even a narwhal horn, and thought it was a type of unicorn.” – Carrie Hamburg

A gray, submarine-shaped art installation sits on a grassy field at Atelier de la Nature, featuring circular portholes and a periscope-like structure on top.
A unique submarine sculpture at Atelier de la Nature.

Its practical construction addressed a unique local challenge.

“Did you know chickens eat styrofoam?… Our first sculpture out here of styrofoam, the chickens ate it. So this is our more permanent, chicken proof edition.” – Carrie Hamburg

Educational signage and hidden art installations line the trails at Atelier de la Nature.

Conservation as Creative Action

The most powerful works are those that act directly as conservation tools. A native plant garden, for instance, is also a sculptural habitat for local native bees, a collaborative project between artist Anne Boujold and bee scientist Kimberly Hamm.

Four colorful sculptures made of various glass bottles and recycled materials stand in a field of tall, dry grasses at Atelier de la Nature.
Vibrant sculptures created from recycled glass bottles in the native prairie grasses.

Further along, an installation of over 120 glass bottles glittered in the sun. The creators, Dominic and Alex from the Louisiana Bayou Society, explained its origin.

Two colorful sculptures made of recycled materials and glass bottles rise from a pond, framed by thick green vegetation and a backdrop of trees at Atelier de la Nature.
Sculptures made from litter recovered from local bayous highlight conservation efforts.

“We collect litter out of the waterways. So this is an example of a bunch of bottles that we’ve pulled out of local waterways.” – Dominic
“The bottles stretch back into the 60s.” – Alex

A large outdoor metal sculpture featuring various silver insect shapes, including a spider and a beetle, attached to the ends of long, thin metal rods that curve upward like a bouquet from a circular base at Atelier de la Nature.
A creative metal sculpture at the reserve mimics a floral “bloom” of various insects.

For them, the space is a perfect fit for their mission.

“We just love being part of something that is so concentrated on nature. We are trying to conserve the bayous by picking up all of that litter and the entire purpose of this organization really fits in line with that.” – Dominic

The Root of the Mission

A large outdoor educational sign titled "Memory in the Life of a Cajun Prairie" at Atelier de la Nature, featuring information on prairie restoration, native species, and carbon sequestration alongside a diagram of prairie plant root systems.
This educational display details the restoration of 2.5 acres of endangered Cajun prairie

Walking through the emerging Cajun prairie and young forest where over a thousand native trees have been planted, I asked Brandon about the core reason behind this immense effort.

Karen LeBlanc stands in a field of native grasses and wildflowers at Atelier de la Nature, conversing with Dr. Brandon Ballengée.
Karen LeBlanc learns about the restoration of native Cajun prairie habitats.

“We live in a really special part of the world. I mean, South Louisiana is just known for the animals and the plants here. It’s part of our culture and our connection to nature,” he said.
“We have a lot of youth to come out that have never gone on a nature walk before. And, you know, even if they’re from, like, rural areas, you’d be amazed how disconnected often people can get nowadays.” – Brandon Ballengée

Folklore-inspired “Baba Yaga” chicken house stands as a striking example of the reserve’s functional art.

Planning Your Visit

Atelier de la Nature is a working nature reserve and communal project. Access is primarily through scheduled programs, workshops, and festivals.

DetailInformation
What It IsA 30 acre nature reserve, sculpture garden, and outdoor education center.
Founded2017 by the Ballengée family.
LocationArnaudville, in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana (Cajun Country).
MissionTo inspire stewardship through programs that combine art, science, and nature based education.
Key OfferingsGuided nature walks, eco workshops, art and science programming, sustainable cooking workshops, habitat restoration days, and seasonal festivals such as the Halloween Art and Nature Festival, Prairie Planting Day, and Fête de la Nature or Earth Day Festival.
Restoration WorkActive re establishment of Cajun prairie, a native forest, and wetland habitats on former farmland.
How to VisitThe Atelier is a communal program based space. For the most current information on upcoming public events, workshops, and how to participate, connect via the organization’s official social media channels or website.
Karen LeBlanc finds whimsical, hidden sculptures along the enchanted nature trails.

The Workshop Where Nature Itself is the Masterpiece

Atelier de la Nature is more than a destination; it is an ongoing conversation between creativity and ecology. It demonstrates that stewardship is not a chore but a creative, collaborative, and even playful act. From fairy hunts to fungal sculptures and from bottle installations to native bee gardens, every element is designed to inspire a simple and profound realization that protecting our natural world begins with falling in love with it.

Karen LeBlanc stands on a wooden dock by a calm bayou with a canoe in the background at Atelier de la Nature.
Karen LeBlanc explores the scenic bayou waterways at the nature reserve.

Through the Ballengée family’s vision, which is a hybrid of art, science, and deep care, a former soybean field has become a living workshop where every visitor is invited to learn, create, and contribute. It is, truly, a quirky, profound, and only in Louisiana experience.

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