The Ambition of Painting is a major exhibition organized in collaboration with the Barnes Foundation in Philadelphia. It aims to restore complexity to Rousseau, too often reduced to that of a self-taught "customs officer," highlighting his awareness of his artistic language and his desire to fully integrate into the modern art system. Featuring approximately fifty works from international museums and the Barnes Foundation, the exhibition follows a thematic thread that runs through exotic landscapes, symbolic portraits, and urban scenes. Alongside his celebrated paintings of jungles and animals, the exhibition also explores the artist's public construction, from his self-portraits to his relationships with dealers and collectors such as Paul Guillaume and Albert C. Barnes. The analysis of his painting materials and techniques, conducted by the Centre de recherche et de restauration des musées de France, reveals a surprisingly sophisticated and deliberate approach. The exhibition design underscores how Rousseau, despite his lack of academic training, was able to construct an original pictorial vision, balancing apparent naiveté with formal calculation. His compositions, suspended between dream and reality, display a personal language that anticipates some of the explorations of European modernism. The "ambition" evoked by the title is not merely that of artistic success, but that of redefining the role of painting as a tool of imagination and freedom. Through this reinterpretation, the Musée de l'Orangerie invites us to consider Henri Rousseau not as an outsider, but as a protagonist of modernity, capable of combining rigor and imagination in a poetics that continues to question painting itself.
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.
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.
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.
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