In the year in which we celebrate 150 years since the birth of Impressionism, the Musée d'Orsay brings to Milan at Palazzo Reale a large exhibition dedicated to the comparison between two champions of art - Paul Cézanne and Pierre-Auguste Renoir - who contributed in a decisive way to the fortunes of this artistic movement and which influenced entire generations of artists who came after them. The Milanese exhibition presents fifty-two masterpieces, from the first canvases of the 1870s to the more mature works of the early twentieth century, brought together by the art dealer Paul Guillaume and his wife Domenica and today preserved in the Musée de l'Orangerie in Paris. Starting from their most appreciated and well-known paintings, the exhibition will give an account of the different trajectories that the two authors followed throughout their respective careers: a more rigorous and geometric one in Cézanne, a more rounded and harmonious one in Renoir.
An exhibition that retraces some fundamental stages in the history of tattooing, one of the oldest forms of human artistic expression from its thousand-year-old origins to the present day, focusing in particular on the area of the Mediterranean basin.