The Louvre is dedicating a major exhibition to the Carracci drawings, reconstructing the creative process that led to the creation of the famous Galleria Farnese in Rome, frescoed by Annibale Carracci with the collaboration of his brother Agostino and their circle of students. Through a selection of sketches, studies, and preparatory cartoons of exceptional quality, the exhibition offers the opportunity to observe the creation of one of the absolute masterpieces of Baroque painting. Installed in the Mezzanine Napoléon room, the exhibition leads the visitor into the artist's studio, revealing the evolution of the project from the first sketch to the final composition. The drawings trace the journey from the rapidity of the initial stroke to anatomical studies and posing tests, up to the full-scale cartoons that anticipate the frescoes on the vault and in the Camerino. The exhibition testifies to the complexity of a collective process, in which drawing becomes a tool for invention, technical coordination, and dialogue with the client. The exhibition portrays an ambitious and self-aware Annibale Carracci, capable of blending Renaissance teachings with a new narrative energy. At thirty-four, the painter led a monumental undertaking that would shape the evolution of European decoration for over two centuries. The relationship between idea and form, between project and fresco, demonstrates the strength of a conception of art as an intellectual and collective endeavor, which finds its first and purest expression in drawing.
The Accor Arena in Paris hosts the ninth edition of the Meeting de Paris Indoor, one of the most anticipated events on the World Athletics Indoor Tour. The event, organized by the Fédération Française d’Athlétisme, will bring some of the world's top specialists to the French capital.
The Palais de Tokyo in Paris hosts Echo Delay Reverb, a group exhibition bringing together sixty artists to explore connections between the United States and the francophone world. Works, archives and installations intertwine critical theory and visual languages in a journey reflecting on cultural and political exchanges across the Atlanti
At the Grand Palais in Paris, from March 24 to August 2, 2026, a major retrospective explores the final Matisse. More than two hundred works show how illness and immobility turned into creative energy. The cut-outs emerge as his silent revolution, redefining the relationship between color, form, and space.
An exhibition that is a journey through drawings and fanzines that tell the story of a punk and disillusioned America. With his caustic and ironic style, Pettibon dismantles myths and cultural icons, transforming art into a visual pamphlet.