Le Grand feu d'artifice de Paris pour accueillir 2025 sur les Champs-Élysées
Alors que les Jeux olympiques et paralympiques de Paris 2024 ont fait vibrer le monde entier tout l'été, la Ville de Paris invite toutes les Parisiennes et tous les Parisiens le 31 décembre dès 19h pour accueillir 2025 sur la plus belle avenue du monde !
Read morePARIS PHOTO 2024
Since its creation in 1997, Paris Photo has been an essential event on the Parisian cultural scene, bringing together each year the most renowned international galleries of contemporary and modern photography.The fair contributes to strengthening the position of Paris as a cultural capital thanks to unique exhibitions, careful programming, major institutional partnerships and engaging public artistic initiatives.
Read morePop Forever, Tom Wesselmann &…
From October 17, 2024 to February 24, 2025, the Foundation presents “Pop Forever, Tom Wesselmann &…”an exhibition dedicated to Pop Art, one of the major artistic movements of the 1960s whose presence has continued, until today, to assert itself on all continents and for all generations.
Read morePixels: the exhibition that combines digital art and artificial intelligence at the Grand Palais Immersif
The Grand Palais Immersif in Paris welcomes Pixels, the first major Parisian exhibition dedicated to the pioneering artist Miguel Chevalier. From November 5, 2024 to April 6, 2025, come and explore an immersive and interactive journey where digital art and artificial intelligence meet in a unique sensory experience.
Read moreYasuhiro Ishimoto - Des lignes et des corps
From June 19 to November 17, 2024, LE BAL presents a remarkable figure in the history of Japanese photography, yet little-known in France: Yasuhiro Ishimoto (1921-2012). For the first time in Europe, the exhibition, organized in close collaboration with the Ishimoto Yasuhiro Photo Center at the Museum of Art, Kochi, Japan, brings together 169 rare prints, most of them vintage and made by Ishimoto himself. The exhibition focuses on the first decades of his work, between Chicago and Japan. A key figure of the 1950s and 1960s, he will be considered “visually bilingual” through his ability to combine the formal approach of the New Bauhaus with the quintessence of Japanese aesthetics.
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