

Unique Solution Agentis is the only provider of an adaptive enterprise solution development and maintenance platform, AdaptivEnterprise(TM) Solution Suite. In addition, all of Agentis's current offices are undergoing increases in staff to support a growing demand for its flagship product, AdaptivEnterprise(TM) Solution Suite, and to continue the high level of service that Agentis' customers have come to expect and appreciate.

Agentis plans to formalize its office in London, where the company already has employees working to support a customer.
#Dominique butel software
Global Operations Agentis Software is a global company with offices in the United States of America, Australia, and now Europe. Agentis's office in France is located at La Grande Arche, Paroi Nord, 15eme Etage, 92044 Paris-La-Defense Cedex, France. We were fortunate to get Yves because of his immense knowledge of the French market." The office will focus on providing expanded sales, training and consulting services to better meet the needs of customers in France. According to Dominique Butel, Vice President of Field Operations for Europe, "Opening an office in France allows us to expand our customer base, as well as increase direct contact with potential resellers there. Yves has a strong background in the software development industry with experience in sales, technical support and administration. "This announcement further underscores our enthusiastic commitment to serving the European market." Heading the office is Yves Ducros, the first locally-based representative of Agentis Software in France. The Need for Localized Contact "As our first office in Europe, the Paris office is strategic toward growing our relationship with our customers in France and Europe at large," said Jean-Yves Dexmier, President and CEO of Agentis Software. The company's objective is to have a local presence in all key European markets within the next 12 months. The new office is part of an ongoing expansion of Agentis that will take place over the next twelve months. One might read into the works, especially the videos, questions people don’t quite ask themselves: Why are we like this? How far should we go? Where is our future? The paintings, sculptures, and videos express, within them, in their material souls, the very essence of such questions, which might be why they are so compelling.As Agentis Software continues to see unprecedented demand in the European market, the company announced Thursday it has opened a local sales office in Paris, France. Leo Gabin doesn’t escape society they portray a vision of a society in the making. Their works imply the statement, Look at us! In 1897 Gauguin scribed in the upper corner of a painting of Tahitian girls the questions Where Do We Come From What Are We Where Are We Going - but without question marks. Their art underscores the zeitgeist - the spirit of an age dominated by speed and intensity, by images and evanescence, by eroticism and escapism, and perhaps by a present tenuously geared toward a future. The videos are assembled from what could be YouTube or Facebook videos that people self-publish - girls cleaning horrendously messy rooms, girls striding booty to music in front of couches, girls passed out drunk, guys communicating the language of hip-hop, but to Bach instead of Dr. The sculptures are composed from shards of paintings, along with the acetate film used to make screen prints. Got Bandz, 2012, lacquer, spray paint, acrylic and silkscreen on canvas

But they’re all highly controlled in a style that recalls Willem de Kooning’s gestures, Robert Rauschenberg’s reprocessing of images, and Richard Prince’s wry look at particular aspects of the world we now know and seek to come to terms with. The paintings incorporate silk-screen images with the swirly smears of what looks like print colors being wiped off glass. All photos courtesy of Peres Projects, Berlinįor about 10 years the artists’ collective Leo Gabin has mined user-generated media, which is so readily available on the Internet, and divined from that a succinct variety of Internet-generation paintings, sculptures, and video clips.
