CURRENT EXHIBITIONS!
Categories : PARIS, published on : 7/7/23
Rick Owens – Temple of Love
Until January 10, 2026
Palais Galliera, 75116 Paris
For many insiders, one of the highlights of Paris Fashion Week in June 2025 isn’t happening on a runway, but at the Palais Galliera, the city’s fashion museum. The exhibition is dedicated to Rick Owens — only the third designer, after Azzedine Alaïa and Martin Margiela, to receive such an honor during his lifetime. But why him, and why now, when his career is far from over?
1925–2025: One Hundred Years of Art Deco, at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs
Until April 26, 2026
Musée des Arts Décoratifs, 75001 Paris
The Musée des Arts Décoratifs celebrates the centenary of the 1925 International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts.
“Minimal” at the Bourse de Commerce – Pinault Collection
Until January 19, 2026
Bourse de Commerce, 75001 Paris
The Pinault Collection dedicates its final exhibition of the year to Minimal Art.
Soulages, Another Light: Painting on Paper
Until January 11, 2026
Musée du Luxembourg – Odéon, 75006 Paris
The Musée du Luxembourg sheds light on a lesser-known but striking facet of the work of one of the most celebrated French painters of the 20th century.
Niki de Saint Phalle, Jean Tinguely, Pontus Hulten, at the Grand Palais
Until January 10, 2026
Grand Palais, 75008 Paris
The exhibition tells the story of the friendship between an artist couple and a museum director who left a lasting mark on 20th-century art.
Robert Doisneau, Given Moments
Until October 12, 2025
Musée Maillol, 75007 Paris
A leading figure of humanist photography, Robert Doisneau is very likely the most famous French photographer in the world. According to his daughter Francine, the Atelier Robert Doisneau and its archive of 450,000 negatives have been featured in 158 exhibitions since his death in 1994 — an impressive figure that reflects his near-universal appeal, though it might suggest that everything has already been seen and said about the creator of the iconic Kiss by the Hôtel de Ville. Yet, the new exhibition at the Musée Maillol — two years in the making and organized with the help of his daughters Francine Deroudille and Annette Doisneau — aims to convey something beyond the images themselves: “a way of looking at others.”