The exhibition Walter De Maria: The Singular Experience offers a compact yet incisive reconsideration of an artist who redefined the relationship between measurement, form and perception. The presentation highlights the radical nature of his research, grounded in numerical sequences, rigorous geometries and an understanding of space as a physical encounter before it is a visual one. Sculptures and serial works converse with films and drawings that reveal a practice far less easily categorised than its usual association with Land Art suggests - De Maria emerges as an artist capable of merging mathematical precision, metaphysical tension and a subtle irony that destabilises any sense of certainty. At the core is the idea of a “singular experience”, conceived as a direct form of engagement in which viewers are invited to confront works that resist passive observation and instead demand an active presence. The exhibition conveys the complexity of an artist who treated form as discipline and perception as a field of freedom, allowing an energy to surface that still challenges the ways we look at, measure and inhabit space.
At the Orangerie in Paris, an exhibition rediscovers Henri Rousseau as a conscious protagonist of modernity. Between naiveté and ambition, the dream of the "customs officer" becomes the boldest statement of modern painting.
The retrospective at the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris retraces Lee Miller’s path from Surrealist experimentation to wartime photography. From the 1930s to the European front, her work reveals a lucid and uncompromising gaze. A body of work that brings together personal experience and historical testimony.
At the Musée Carnavalet an exhibition traces the life and work of Madame de Sévigné through letters, portraits and objects, revealing seventeenth-century Paris through the eyes of one of its sharpest observers.
The retrospective at the Musée du Luxembourg explores the visionary universe of Leonora Carrington, shaped by Surrealism, myth and esotericism. Paintings and drawings reveal a poetics grounded in transformation and ambiguity. A body of work that anticipates key themes of contemporary thought, from gender to the freedom of imagination.