Schedule: Tue / Wed / Thu / Sun 10 am - 6 pm | Fri / Sat 10 am - 8 pm | Mon closed
Tickets: 17 € | 15 €
Location: Petit Palais
Address: Avenue Winston Churchill
The Petit Palais in Paris is dedicating a major retrospective to Pekka Halonen, one of the leading exponents of Finnish painting between the 19th and 20th centuries. Trained in Paris, where he studied under Paul Gauguin, Halonen successfully blended the influences of Synthetism and Japonism with a profound connection to the nature of his homeland. The exhibition offers a journey through the wild landscapes and extreme seasons of the North, highlighting his reputation as a "painter of snow," capable of capturing the light and silence of Finnish winter with a unique chromatic sensibility. Halonen's studio-residence, Halosenniemi, on the shores of Lake Tuusula, was the heart of his artistic life and the place where he developed his pictorial language, characterized by simplicity and introspection. Nature, domestic life, and moments of everyday quiet become universal subjects, observed with a sense of harmony that unites Nordic Realism and French modernity. The first major retrospective dedicated to Halonen in France, the exhibition highlights his role as a bridge between the Symbolist tradition and the avant-garde movements of the early twentieth century, while also offering a contemporary reflection on landscape and its transformation. His forests, lakes, and snows today take on a new meaning, as images of a changing natural world, but also as evidence of an artistic sensibility capable of combining intimacy with a universal vision.
The Musée de l'Homme devotes the new edition of Automne tropical to palm trees. Inside the Grandes Serres of the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, an immersive journey explores their morphology, habitats, history and uses. A voyage between nature and culture unveiling the secrets of a tropical icon.
A major retrospective in Paris brings Philip Guston back into focus, the artist who left abstraction behind to confront the political and social traumas of the 1970s through irony and grotesque imagery. His satirical drawings and figurative paintings reveal the courage to turn painting into a tool of critique and resistance.
The Musée d’Orsay presents an exhibition on Renoir as a draftsman, featuring around one hundred works on paper from international collections. From his academic training to his later years, the show reveals the central role of drawing and red chalk in the creative process of the Impressionist Master.
The Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris presents a new production of La Cage aux Folles, directed by Olivier Py with Laurent Lafitte as Albin/Zaza. Mixing humor and spectacle, the musical explores identity, diversity and family, reaffirming its universal relevance.