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This Exhibition
© » KADIST

Tino Sehgal

Performance (Performance)

Tino Sehgal’s This Exhibition requires an interpreter (in this particular piece, a gallery attendant) to faux faint each and every time a visitor enters into a given space. Upon hitting the cold, hard gallery floor, the seemingly confused interpreter writhes slowly on the ground while reciting a few lines from the curatorial statement in a whispered moan.

The Tower of Babel: The Carnaval
© » KADIST

Du Zhenjun

Photography (Photography)

The Tower of Babel is an installation of large-format photographs that forces the audience to occupy a central position through its monumental scale. These photographs present a series of urban landscapes and assembled Foucauldian structures of the present. Du sees the Tower of Babel as a continually reinvented narrative that warns people of “dangerous tendencies in the present time.” Du’s Babylonian towers resurrect from fallen rubbles of religious history in grand scale to focus on modern crises of civilization.

The Tower of Babel: Independence of the country
© » KADIST

Du Zhenjun

Photography (Photography)

The Tower of Babel is an installation of large-format photographs that forces the audience to occupy a central position through its monumental scale. These photographs present a series of urban landscapes and assembled Foucauldian structures of the present. Du sees the Tower of Babel as a continually reinvented narrative that warns people of “dangerous tendencies in the present time.” Du’s Babylonian towers resurrect from fallen rubbles of religious history in grand scale to focus on modern crises of civilization.

The Tower of Babel: Destruction
© » KADIST

Du Zhenjun

Photography (Photography)

The Tower of Babel is an installation of large-format photographs that forces the audience to occupy a central position through its monumental scale. These photographs present a series of urban landscapes and assembled Foucauldian structures of the present. Du sees the Tower of Babel as a continually reinvented narrative that warns people of “dangerous tendencies in the present time.” Du’s Babylonian towers resurrect from fallen rubbles of religious history in grand scale to focus on modern crises of civilization.

Time Capsules (Collège de France B4)
© » KADIST

Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige

Installation (Installation)

Produced for the Prix Marcel Duchamp and presented at the Centre Pompidou in October 2017, the installation Uncomformities is comprised of photographs, archaeological drawings, and narratives, based on the analysis of core samples from different sites in Beirut, Paris and Athens. The work questions how, at a time when traces and memories no longer exist, and the earth remains the only witness of our past, history is produced, and how the stories of our civilization are written and told. In each location, the artists collected soil samples, which they asked experts to analyze before creating a series of narrations and coded drawings.

The Rebellion of the Roots (France)
© » KADIST

Daniela Ortiz

Painting (Painting)

The Rebellion of Roots by Daniela Ortiz depicts a series of situations in which tropical plants, held hostage in the botanical gardens and greenhouses of Europe, are protected and nurtured by the spirits of racialized people who died as a result of European racism. The work is divided into four short stories: About Afghanistan and heroin , About Exposition Colonial and cow , About Jardin d’acclimatation and potato , and About Vietnam . The series of 14 painted panels draw upon the aesthetic of ex-votos, a genre of traditional religious folk painting that acts as a tribute for divine intervention in response to personal tragedy.

France, détours, episode 2: this line is your path
© » KADIST

Frédéric Moser, Philippe Schwinger

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In 1978, Jean-Luc Godard and Anne-Marie Miéville made the TV series: “France / tour / detour / two / children”, in which they aimed to identify the lifestyle of French people in 12 episodes of 26 minutes each. On each episode a little boy and girl are firstly asked about their daily lives. By broadening the scope of the interview, the questions of Godard and Mieville gradually bring the protagonists to think of themselves as subjects in the history of the world, to “live and see themselves on television” with a critical point of view.

Hermit Crab Project
© » KADIST

Charwei Tsai

Photography (Photography)

Charwai Tsai’s photograph documents her Hermit Crab Project installation upon the construction site of gallery Sora in Tokyo. Tsai placed live hermit crabs and shells in a sandy enclosure at the site, writing fragments of The One China policy and the Taiwanese Independence statements on each shell. As the hermit crabs moved and swapped shells, they formed new connections between the statements.

Zig Zag Au Fil Du Temps / Zig Zag Over Time Collège de France
© » KADIST

Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige

Installation (Installation)

Produced for the Prix Marcel Duchamp and presented at the Centre Pompidou in October 2017, the installation Unconformities is comprised of photographs, archaeological drawings, and narratives, based on the analysis of core samples from different sites in Beirut, Paris and Athens. The work questions how, at a time when traces and memories no longer exist, and the earth remains the only witness of our past, history is produced, and how the stories of our civilization are written and told. In each location, the artists collected soil samples, which they asked experts to analyze before creating a series of narrations and coded drawings.

The Town
© » KADIST

Michel Auder

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Town consists of footage taken from Auder’s studio of the skyline of New York, tracking planes as they fly across the sky and pass tall buildings. At the time of recording, like all of this films, there was no particular intent. However, in the aftermath of 9/11, this film becomes prescient and ominously prophetic.

Talking Head
© » KADIST

Michel Auder

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Talking Head is a short film in black and white of Auder’s daughter Alexandra, hidden behind a hemp plant, playing with a plastic wrapper and babbling in an imaginative way. The viewer is uncertain whether Alexandra knows she is being filmed but given that Auder was constantly filming she was probably oblivious to it. Her statements make little sense to the outsider : ‘The thing never came back again.

dbqp
© » KADIST

Aurélien Froment

dbqp is a photographic series in which the artist handles an enlargement of the plate with three cutout windows which was used for L’Archipel (The Archipelago) in collaboration with Pierre Leguillon. The previous work took the form of four photographs presenting a page illustrated with three images. By studying these with more attention, it is possible to figure out that these objects were placed behind the pierced card with three openings.

Théâtre de Poche
© » KADIST

Aurélien Froment

Film & Video (Film & Video)

The Théâtre de poche video is inspired by Arthur Lloyd / “Human Card Index”, a magician who was famous for being able to take out of his pockets any image requested by his spectators. His coat hid over 15 000 different prints. In Aurélien Froment’s work, a magician presents images by making them appear, disappear or move in space.

The Syphilis of Sisyphus
© » KADIST

Mary Reid Kelley

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In the video The Syphilis of Sisyphus (2011), Reid Kelley transported her heroine to the French demimonde. The film centers on a pregnant Parisian prostitute who exemplifies Baudelaire’s paean to the superiority of cosmetic over natural beauty. With sets that shift between Sisyphus’s boudoir and the streets of Paris, the work is an antic romp through Revolutionary and post Revolutionary France, with brief vignettes involving everyone from Diderot, Marie Antoinette, and Marat to Robespierre, Napoleon, and Haussmann.

Lack of Evidence
© » KADIST

Hayoun Kwon

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Lack of evidence is the account of a Nigerian called Oscar exiled in France, which confronts a historical and social reality with a personal and intimate testimony. Taking as a point of departure Oscar’s request for asylum in France, this fictional document is a peregrination on the different levels of the reconstitution of memory and the subjectivity of its interpretation. Oscar’s legal testimony reveals a dramatic reality taking place in Nigeria, where family executions still exist in the case of having twins who are considered a ‘diabolical off-spring’.

Capture, 2019-02-02, Paris
© » KADIST

Paolo Cirio

Photography (Photography)

Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology. The original photographs were taken during protests in France, Cirio collected these images and created an online platform containing a database of the 4000 police faces that the AI program isolated. The artist crowdsourced their identification by name and then publicly exposed the officers by printing their headshots and posting them throughout Paris.

Capture, 2017-05-08, Paris, Macron Election
© » KADIST

Paolo Cirio

Photography (Photography)

Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology. The original photographs were taken during protests in France, Cirio collected these images and created an online platform containing a database of the 4000 police faces that the AI program isolated. The artist crowdsourced their identification by name and then publicly exposed the officers by printing their headshots and posting them throughout Paris.

Capture, 2019-01-26
© » KADIST

Paolo Cirio

Photography (Photography)

Capture is a photographic series by Paolo Cirio in which the artist sourced 1000 public images of police officers’ faces and processed them with facial recognition technology. The original photographs were taken during protests in France, Cirio collected these images and created an online platform containing a database of the 4000 police faces that the AI program isolated. The artist crowdsourced their identification by name and then publicly exposed the officers by printing their headshots and posting them throughout Paris.

Promesse d’endettement provisoire
© » KADIST

Eva Barto

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

The work, Promesse d’endettement provisoire (Promise of temporary debt) , begins with a contract signed with KADIST. The value of the debt is decided by the collector and determines the duration of the contract before the artist proposes a final output. Discussions and negotiations occur during the awaiting period.

Summer Camp
© » KADIST

Lola Gonzàlez

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In Summer Camp , Lola Gonzàlez filmed a group of friends at the home of her parents in the department of Charente (France) in the process of transforming the house into a training camp. They are doing exercises with the furniture as if they were training to fight against something yet to happen. Gonzàlez ’s films persistently evoke the same fear of an external threat, one which is never explained but which can be placed in relation with the current political situation and social tension.

Koropa
© » KADIST

Laura Henno

Film & Video (Film & Video)

In 2009, Laura Henno began research in the archipelago Comoros for her first film Koropa the first episode of a triptych— completed in 2016. Mayotte is the only remaining island belonging to France in the archipelago of the Comoros, which gained independence in 1975, creating an invisible border that divides the islands from Europe. Koropa is the portrait of a particular relationship: that of Ben, a former fisherman turned smuggler, and Patron, a child who makes his first smuggling voyage between the island of Anjouan and Mayotte.

1,2,3 soleil ! (1440 sunsets per 24 hours series)
© » KADIST

Haig Aivazian

Installation (Installation)

For the exhibition 1440 sunsets per 24 hours at KADIST Paris in 2017, Haig Aivazian presented a sprawling installation, which sought to enact various instances of the deployment of light and darkness within public space and sports, reflecting on the double-edged abilities of lighting systems to expose, highlight or dissimulate subjects. For the installtion 1,2,3 soleil ! the space was structured like a material index, posing limbs and skins from stadiums and public spaces —namely floodlights, electric poles and asphalt— alongside abstract drawings inspired by policing and sporting data visualization iconography.

La libertad
© » KADIST

Laura Huertas Millán

Film & Video (Film & Video)

La libertad is a “greca” film, a meander film, with no beginning nor end, weaving together fragments of daily life at the Navarro´s, counting threads and time, wondering and wandering around words as emancipation, labor, and freedom (la libertad), the word that most appeared in our conversations. The “greca”, the meander, is the main symbol weaved in the textiles made by the Navarro sisters, from Santo Tomás Jalieza, México. A geometrical form of an endless braid of diamonds, the “greca” represents corn, an entity worshiped by the pre-hispanic civilisations of Mesoamerica.

Myself as a Fountain
© » KADIST

Leonardogillesfleur

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Leonardogillesfleur describes Myself as a Fountain : “The couple kissing in the park. Pedestrian pass by with boom box, fire truck sirens and baseball-bat sounds suggest they are in New York. But the kiss is not accomplished and saliva drips from the lover’s open mouth like a fountain of unfulfilled desire.”

Squid Currency
© » KADIST

Natsuko Uchino

Sculpture (Sculpture)

Squid Currency is a series of 13 non-calibrated double-sided tin coins made using a casting technique dating back to Neolithic times where cuttlebones (squid bones) were carved by hand and then used as a mold. Natsuko Uchino draws on research into tin mining across the world, which takes place largely in China and Bangladesh as well as in Potosi, Bolivia where silver has been depleted due to the production of coins and other ornate riches during the 16th century Spanish Empire. Tin has a low melting point and is easily up-cycled from vessels such as measuring cups and kitchen utensils found at yard sales.

Action 3:02
© » KADIST

Leonardogillesfleur

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Leonardogillesfleur describe Action 3:02 as their “first New York blizzard storm at about 5am. The photographic moment of a photo album which could have been taken by anybody in any familiar situation with the intention to immortalize that moment.”

Action 26:15
© » KADIST

Leonardogillesfleur

Film & Video (Film & Video)

Of Action 26:15 leonardogillesfleur notes: “There is almost an ice-cream store in every corner of Buenos Aires. The family [in the video] is having an ice-cream in the hot summer afternoon. Small tics appear on people’s faces from a fly or the attempt to hold still while the ice-cream top melts or drops off its sugar-cone.”

Diane Arbus: A printed retrospective, 1960-1971
© » KADIST

Pierre Leguillon

Installation (Installation)

End of 2008, Pierre Leguillon presented at KADIST, Paris the first retrospective of the works of Diane Arbus (1923-1971) organized in France since 1980, bringing together all the images commissioned to the New York photographer by the Anglo-American press in the 1960s. This exhibition, destined to tour in various locations, presents the original pages of the magazines, including “Harper’s Bazaar”, “Esquire”, “Nova” and “The Sunday Times Magazine”. As Pierre Leguillon states: “The mythology surrounding Diane Arbus’ character is willingly set aside to offer a more neutral point of view on a more unfamiliar part of her work, although it was mass-distributed.” Many of the characters portrayed in these commissioned works seem less sensational at first glance than the “freaks” that made Diane Arbus’ work so famous, since the retrospective MOMA organized in 1973 in New York, two years after her suicide.

La Chambre Marocaine
© » KADIST

Malik Nejmi

Photography (Photography)

La Chambre Marocaine series is a means to reconnect personally to his connection to family history and objectively assess the process of reconnection. By creating this work in the Villa Medici in Rome, the neutral space—neither France nor Morocco—allowed the artist to distance himself with his history in the examination process. The series looks at Morocco through the eyes of his children and object belonging to his grandmother: a scarf, a cushion and a book in Arabic.

Nos visages C
© » KADIST

Nidhal Chamekh

Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Nos visages ( Our Faces ) continues Nidhal Chamekh’s research around visual souvenirs of figures of the past and the light they might shed on our contemporary era. For this series of drawings, the artist draws from articles of French colonial propaganda, specifically the magazine Le Miroir , founded in 1910. In these documents Senegalese and Berber “infantrymen” participating in the First World War were represented in a way that situates them “somewhere between the ethnographical survey and the hackneyed colonial and orientalist image” says Morad Montazami.

Du Zhenjun

Paolo Cirio

Artist Paolo Cirio engages with legal, economic, and cultural systems of information...

Leonardogillesfleur

The artistic entity “leonardogillesfleur” is the alliance between two artists, Leonardo Giacomuzzo (b...

Joana Hadjithomas & Khalil Joreige

Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige collaborate as both filmmakers and artists, producing cinematic and visual artwork that intertwine, spanning feature and documentary films, video and photographic installations, sculpture, performance lectures and texts...

Michel Auder

Michel Auder was born in 1945 in Soissons, France...

Eric Baudelaire

Currently based in Paris, Franco-American artist Eric Baudelaire has developed an oeuvre primarily composed of film, but which also includes photography, silkscreen prints, performance, publications and installations...

Malik Nejmi

The practice of the French-Moroccan artist Malik Nejmi (b...

Pierre Leguillon

Pierre Leguillon is an artist who has developed projects as a curator and critic since the beginning of the 1990s, by creating a single page review, ‘Sommaire’ (35 issues between 1991 and 1996), then by collaborating to ‘Journal des Arts’, and ‘Art press’ (Special issue « Oublier l’exposition » in 2000), then to ‘Purple’ (column « Calme plat » about printed objects from 2002 to 2004)...

Haig Aivazian

Haig Aivazian is an artist and a writer, born in 1980 in Beirut and currently based there...

Fabien Giraud & Raphael Siboni

The collaborative work of Fabien Giraud and Raphael Siboni is part of a reflection on the history of cinema, science, and technology...

Thu Van Tran

Thu Van Tran grew up in the paradox of the dismantlement of the French colonial empire in Vietnam...

Hayoun Kwon

Born in 1981 in Seoul, South Korea Lives and works in Paris and Nantes Hayoun Kwon was born in South Koera in 1981 and moved to France in 2011 to pursue her studies at the Nantes School of Art and Le Fresnoy, where she presented the video Lack of evidence for her final diploma...

Adrien Missika

Adrien Missika (1981, Paris, France) studied and developed his career in Lausanne where he founded 1m3 artspace...

Eva Barto

Eva Barto (born in 1987, France) — currently based in Paris...

Charwei Tsai

Tino Sehgal

Nidhal Chamekh

Based between his native Tunis and Paris, Nidhal Chamekh’s work is an investigation into history as a point of access to our contemporary times...

Laura Henno

Laura Henno was trained as a photographer and studied film at Le Fresnoy – Studio National des Arts Contemporains...

Natsuko Uchino

Natsuko Uchino is an artist whose practice is defined by its interaction with agriculture and craft; she relocated to a rural area of France in order to have an open air studio where she could produce ceramics and work with natural elements such as mushrooms and fermentation techniques and where she collaborates with farms...

Dennis Adams

Since 1998, through site specific works, often in public spaces, or video works, Dennis Adams focuses on ambiguous characters, condemned by our recent history, revealing traumas or collective amnesia phenomena...

Daniela Ortiz

In order to reveal and critique hegemonic structures of power, Daniela Ortiz constructs visual narratives that examine concepts such as nationality, racialization, and social class...

Michelle and Noel Keserwany

Michelle and Noël Keserwany compose and perform their own songs, as well as contribute to the illustrations and animations featured in the videos they produced...

Mary Reid Kelley

Drawing from literature, plays, and historical events, Mary Reid Kelley makes rambunctious videos that explore the condition of women throughout history...

Diego Rivera

© » LITHUB

about 11 months ago (02/09/2024)

Who Made Who? On the Creative Collaboration of Man Ray and Kiki de Montparnasse ‹ Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Fiction and Poetry News and Culture Lit Hub Radio Reading Lists Book Marks CrimeReads About Log In Literary Hub Craft and Criticism Literary Criticism Craft and Advice In Conversation On Translation Fiction and Poetry Short Story From the Novel Poem News and Culture History Science Politics Biography Memoir Food Technology Bookstores and Libraries Film and TV Travel Music Art and Photography The Hub Style Design Sports Freeman’s The Virtual Book Channel Lit Hub Radio Behind the Mic Beyond the Page The Cosmic Library The Critic and Her Publics Emergence Magazine Fiction/Non/Fiction First Draft: A Dialogue on Writing Future Fables The History of Literature I’m a Writer But Just the Right Book Keen On The Literary Life with Mitchell Kaplan New Books Network Read Smart Talk Easy Tor Presents: Voyage Into Genre Windham-Campbell Prizes Podcast Write-minded Reading Lists The Best of the Decade Book Marks Best Reviewed Books BookMarks Daily Giveaway CrimeReads True Crime The Daily Thrill CrimeReads Daily Giveaway Log In Via W...

© » KQED

about 11 months ago (02/08/2024)

‘The Taste of Things’ Review: A Moving Tale of Love and Food | KQED Skip to Nav Skip to Main Skip to Footer upper waypoint Arts & Culture Food, Glorious Food (and Other Pleasures) in ‘The Taste of Things’ Lindsey Bahr, Associated Press Feb 8 Save Article Save Article Failed to save article Please try again Email Benoit Magimel and Juliette Binoche in ‘The Taste of Things.’ (Stéphanie Branchu/ IFC Films via AP) The Taste of Things should come with a warning: Audiences may be tempted to abandon work as they know it and start a beautiful, calm new life in the French countryside devoted to the culinary arts...

© » FRANCE24

about 11 months ago (01/28/2024)

Climate activists hurl soup at the Mona Lisa at the Louvre Museum in Paris Skip to main content Climate activists hurl soup at the Mona Lisa at the Louvre Museum in Paris Two protesters from a climate and agricultural NGO hurled soup onto the bulletproof glass protecting Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" painting in Paris, demanding the right to "healthy and sustainable food"...

© » FRANCE24

about 12 months ago (01/18/2024)

'Bonnard, Pierre et Marthe': French painter Pierre Bonnard's life in film - France 24 Skip to main content 'Bonnard, Pierre et Marthe': French painter Pierre Bonnard's life in film Issued on: 18/01/2024 - 16:07 Modified: 18/01/2024 - 16:10 01:48 Video by: FRANCE 24 Follow | FRANCE 24 Regarded as one of France's greatest painters of the 20th century, Pierre Bonnard has recently returned to the public eye thanks to a recently released biopic directed by Martin Provost...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/15/2023)

Formaldehyde and butterflies in France—Damien Hirst takes over Château La Coste Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Diary blog Formaldehyde and butterflies in France—Damien Hirst takes over Château La Coste Famous works by Brit artist to go on show at the sprawling Provençal estate The Art Newspaper 15 December 2023 Share Damien Hirst photographed by Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/13/2023)

Renaissance nude painting row at French school sparks teacher walkout Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Education news Renaissance nude painting row at French school sparks teacher walkout Some students were reportedly “disturbed” by Giuseppe Cesari work which depicts bathing nymphs Gareth Harris 13 December 2023 Share Giuseppe Cesari's Diana and Actaeon (1603) Photo: Google Cultural Institute via Wikimedia creative commons A 17th-century painting by the Renaissance artist Giuseppe Cesari featuring five nude women is at the centre of a censorship row at a French school...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/12/2023)

Louvre raises ticket prices by 30% in Olympics year Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Museums & Heritage news Louvre raises ticket prices by 30% in Olympics year The price increase will help to subsidise free entry for some visitors and regulate crowd size Gareth Harris 12 December 2023 Share The museum's last ticket raise occurred in 2017 Photo: Inge Knoff via Flickr The Musée du Louvre in Paris is increasing its basic ticket price from €17 to €22 from 15 January as part of a plan to support free admission programmes for some visitors...

© » ART & OBJECT

about 13 months ago (12/12/2023)

The Louvre Raises Funds to Keep Chardin Painting in France | Art & Object Skip to main content Subscribe to our free e-letter! Webform Your Email Address Role Art Collector/Enthusiast Artist Art World Professional Academic Country USA Afghanistan Albania Algeria American Samoa Andorra Angola Anguilla Antarctica Antigua & Barbuda Argentina Armenia Aruba Ascension Island Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bhutan Bolivia Bosnia & Herzegovina Botswana Bouvet Island Brazil British Indian Ocean Territory British Virgin Islands Brunei Bulgaria Burkina Faso Burundi Cambodia Cameroon Canada Canary Islands Cape Verde Caribbean Netherlands Cayman Islands Central African Republic Ceuta & Melilla Chad Chile China Christmas Island Clipperton Island Cocos (Keeling) Islands Colombia Comoros Congo - Brazzaville Congo - Kinshasa Cook Islands Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Curaçao Cyprus Czechia Côte d’Ivoire Denmark Diego Garcia Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Estonia Eswatini Ethiopia Falkland Islands Faroe Islands Fiji Finland France French Guiana French Polynesia French Southern Territories Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Gibraltar Greece Greenland Grenada Guadeloupe Guam Guatemala Guernsey Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana Haiti Heard & McDonald Islands Honduras Hong Kong SAR China Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Isle of Man Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Jersey Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Kosovo Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Latvia Lebanon Lesotho Liberia Libya Liechtenstein Lithuania Luxembourg Macao SAR China Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Mali Malta Marshall Islands Martinique Mauritania Mauritius Mayotte Mexico Micronesia Moldova Monaco Mongolia Montenegro Montserrat Morocco Mozambique Myanmar (Burma) Namibia Nauru Nepal Netherlands Netherlands Antilles New Caledonia New Zealand Nicaragua Niger Nigeria Niue Norfolk Island Northern Mariana Islands North Korea North Macedonia Norway Oman Outlying Oceania Pakistan Palau Palestinian Territories Panama Papua New Guinea Paraguay Peru Philippines Pitcairn Islands Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Réunion Samoa San Marino Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia Seychelles Sierra Leone Singapore Sint Maarten Slovakia Slovenia Solomon Islands Somalia South Africa South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands South Korea South Sudan Spain Sri Lanka St...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/11/2023)

President Macron confirms Notre Dame opening date plus plans for a new museum Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Heritage news President Macron confirms Notre Dame opening date plus plans for a new museum While worshippers will be permitted to enter the cathedral by December 2024, a revamp of the surrounding area will continue Gareth Harris 11 December 2023 Share Paris's Notre Dame Cathedral after the devastating fire in 2019 Photo: Víctor Perea Ros via Wikimedia Commons The date for a partial reopening of Notre Dame has been confirmed as 8 December 2024, five and a half years after the fire that destroyed the historic monument located on Paris’s Île de la Cité in the Seine river...

© » FRANCE24

about 13 months ago (12/11/2023)

Renaissance nude row sparks teacher walkout at French school Skip to main content Renaissance nude row sparks teacher walkout at French school Teachers at a school outside Paris refused to work on Monday as the establishment grappled with a crisis sparked by the showing in class of a painting by a Renaissance master containing several nude women...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/08/2023)

Colombian artist Daniel Otero Torres wins French art prize Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Art Basel in Miami Beach 2023 news Colombian artist Daniel Otero Torres wins French art prize CPGA-Etant donnés Prize is awarded to artists either from or working in France Carlie Porterfield 8 December 2023 Share Mor Charpentier’s Alex Mor and Philippe Charpentier (fourth and fifth from left) collect Otero Torres’s prize Courtesy French Professional Committee of Art Galleries (CPGA) and Villa Albertine The Colombian artist Daniel Otero Torres, who lives and works in Paris, has been named the winner of this year’s CPGA-Etant donnés Prize, awarded by two French art bodies to promote France’s art scene to international audiences at Art Basel in Miami Beach, among other venues...

© » THEARTNEWSPER

about 13 months ago (12/08/2023)

Controversy swirls around Centre Pompidou ahead of 2025 closure Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Museums news Controversy swirls around Centre Pompidou ahead of 2025 closure Talks between trade unions and the French culture ministry stall as workers fear for their future during the Paris museum’s five-year shutdown Vincent Noce 8 December 2023 Share A museum in turmoil: the Pompidou is due to close from 2025 until 2030...

© » LE MONDE

about 13 months ago (12/06/2023)

Xavier Darcos réélu chancelier à l’Institut de France Offrir Le Monde Article réservé aux abonnés L’ancien ministre et membre de l’Académie française Xavier Darcos, à l’Institut de France, à Paris, le 25 octobre 2022...

© » FRANCE24

about 14 months ago (11/09/2023)

Picasso's 'Woman with a Watch' fetches $139 million at New York auction Skip to main content Picasso's 'Woman with a Watch' fetches $139 million at New York auction One of Pablo Picasso's masterpieces, "Woman with a Watch," was sold at auction Wednesday night for $139.3 million by Sotheby's in New York, the second-highest price ever achieved for the artist...

© » BROOKLYN STREET ART

about 14 months ago (11/07/2023)

Points de Vue 2023 / Part II / Bayonne, France | Brooklyn Street Art BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY We’re back in Bayonne today to look at more images from the Points de Vue festival hosted last month in the south of France...

© » BROOKLYN STREET ART

about 14 months ago (11/02/2023)

Points de Vue 2023 / Bayonne, France / Part I | Brooklyn Street Art BROOKLYN STREET ART LOVES YOU MORE EVERY DAY From October 18 to 22, 2023, the Points de Vue Festival celebrated its seventh year in the realm of public art...

© » SOCIETY

about 15 months ago (10/25/2023)

Cet article est à lire dans Society #217, disponible en kiosque du 26 octobre au 8 novembre 2023....

© » FRANCE24

about 16 months ago (09/19/2023)

Paris's Human Rights Wall: A new public art space in French capital - Perspective Skip to main content Paris's Human Rights Wall: A new public art space in French capital Issued on: 19/09/2023 - 12:57 Modified: 19/09/2023 - 12:59 07:17 PERSPECTIVE © FRANCE 24 By: Haxie MEYERS-BELKIN Follow This week in Paris, in conjunction with city authorities, Amnesty International is unveiling the Human Rights Wall, a new public art space whose inaugural work pays homage to six modern-day defenders of human rights around the world...

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about 17 months ago (08/27/2023)

Paris exhibits to see this autumn, from Bollywood to Chagall and Picasso Skip to main content Culture Calendar Paris exhibits to see this autumn, from Bollywood to Chagall and Picasso As Parisians return from their summer holidays and get back to work or school (a period known in France as “la rentrée”), the City of Lights is set for a rich cultural season...

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about 18 months ago (07/24/2023)

French movie stars pay final farewell to British-born actor and singer Jane Birkin Skip to main content French movie stars pay final farewell to British-born actor and singer Jane Birkin Stars of the French screen on Monday turned out to bid a final farewell to the British-born actor and singer Jane Birkin who died earlier this month after charming France for decades with her style and panache...

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about 18 months ago (07/13/2023)

France fast-tracks Jewish claims on artwork stolen during WWII Skip to main content France fast-tracks Jewish claims on artwork stolen during WWII France on Thursday passed a law making it easier to return the works of art seized by Nazi Germany which ended up in French museums to their Jewish owners...

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about 19 months ago (06/27/2023)

The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum - France 24 Skip to main content The Louvre welcomes Renaissance masterpieces from Naples Capodimonte Museum Issued on: 27/06/2023 - 17:31 Modified: 27/06/2023 - 17:38 02:24 Video by: Catherine VIETTE Follow The Louvre museum is hosting masterpieces from the Capodimonte museum in Naples, offering the world's largest exhibition devoted to the Italian Renaissance for six months, along with its own collections...

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

404 - France Today 404 - France Today 404 Not found Important Cookie Information We collect information from our users – this is for administration and contact purposes in connection with contributions you may wish to make to the site or your use of certain site features such as newsletter subscriptions and property enquiries...

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

The Fontevraud Modern Art Museum, housed in a 12th-century monastery’s former stables, will preserve more than 800 works donated by collectors Martine and Léon Cligman...

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

The Lee Ufan Arles recently opened in a private mansion once owned by antique dealers that has been retrofitted by Tadao Ando....

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

France Seizes Mega-Collector Roman Abramovich’s $120 Million Mansion on the French Riviera as Sanctions Against Oligarchs Mount - via artnet news...

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

We catch up with museum director Nicolas Bourriaud at the inauguration of his latest project, a "quasi-museum" without a collection....

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

The Late Fashion Designer Karl Lagerfeld’s Collection of Art, Blazers, and Other Belongings Sold for $13.5 Million at Sotheby’s France - via artnet news...

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about 27 months ago (10/05/2022)

Muriel and Freddy Salem have curated an outstanding contemporary art collection that is set to be exhibited in the south of France...

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about 33 months ago (04/18/2022)

Friend of Francis Bacon snubs the Tate to give art works to Paris instead | Francis Bacon | The Guardian Skip to main content Skip to navigation Advertisement Friend of Francis Bacon snubs the Tate to give art works to Paris instead Barry Joule says he is cancelling plans to donate a collection to the UK gallery because it failed to exhibit works in earlier gift A photograph of Francis Bacon and Barry Joule with the art dealer Catharina Toto Koopman on holiday in Sicily in 1987...

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about 11 months ago (02/12/2024)

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about 112 months ago (10/21/2015)

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about 199 months ago (09/01/2008)

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about 206 months ago (02/17/2008)