From wednesday 19 may 2021 to sunday 18 july 2021

wed. to sun. 1pm - 7pm

Cabinet de dessins Jean Bonna

14 rue Bonaparte, 75006 Paris

Admission without prior reservation

Death, Eros, Gothic, natural powers or exoticism... Romanticism takes hold of these themes and explores the mysteries of human life. Through about thirty of its most beautiful sheets, using various techniques such as graphite, pen or watercolor, the exhibition highlights the richness of Romantic drawing and presents works by Géricault, Delacroix, Victor Hugo and Scheffer.

It was between 1815 and 1850 that Romantic drawing reached its apogee in an artistic context full of vitality. The Beaux-Arts de Paris intends to sketch its specificities - extravagance, lyricism, despair and excessiveness - through works from its collection, most of which are unpublished.

Attracted by faraway journeys, heroic scenes, and the spectacle of nature, the romantic artists forged a new fantastic and audacious universe that appealed to passionate collectors, some of whom donated their drawings to the Beaux-Arts de Paris: His de la Salle (1867), Edouard Gatteaux (1883) and Alfred Armand (1908).

For this exhibition, the Beaux-Arts de Paris unveils part of this collection, first thoughts but also finished works executed in techniques as varied as graphite, pen and watercolor.

Thanks to the generosity of the association Le Cabinet des amateurs de dessins de l'École des Beaux-Arts, but also with the help of the Heritage Fund of the Ministry of Culture, the Beaux-Arts de Paris has been able to acquire major works from this period, such as Six Horses in Freedom by Horace Vernet, The Conversion of Saint Paul and A Woman on Horseback as an Amazon in Front of a Landscape by Eugène Delacroix, Victor Hugo's Château de Corbus, Eugène Isabey's L'orage en mer, Célestin Nanteuil's Ballade de Léonore, Théodore Chassériau's Etude de femme relever sa chevelure et de mendiante tient son enfant and more recently Eberhard le larmoyeur and Ossian évoquer les fantômes sur les bords du Lora by Ary Scheffer.

Curator : Emmanuelle Brugerolles

 

A publication accompanies the exhibition.

 

 

RESPONSIBLE TICKETING 

 

2, 5 or 10 €, the choice is yours!

The ticket office in charge invites each visitor coming to discover an exhibition at the Beaux-Arts de Paris to choose his or her entrance ticket from among 3 proposed rates: 2 €, 5 € or 10 €. Contribute according to your means, your passion and your desire for commitment!

Free of charge (on presentation of a valid receipt):

• under 18 years old

• students and teachers of the National Higher Schools of Art and Architecture of the Ministère de la Culture

• students from member institutions of the University of Paris-Sciences-et- Lettres (PSL)

• students of the École du Louvre

• holders of the Ministère de la Culture card

• Amis des Beaux-Arts de Paris

• card holder : Maison des Artistes, ICOM, ICOMOS, Association française des commissaires d’exposition (CEA)

• journalists

• jobseekers, recipients of minimum social benefits

• civilian disabled and war-disabled (with an attendant)

 

From wednesday 3 february 2021 to sunday 21 march 2021

Online February 3, 2021

L'atlas

latlas.beauxartsparis.fr

Exhibition to be found on latlas.beauxartsparis.fr, the virtual gallery of the Beaux-Arts de Paris, with an exclusive interview of the artist Jean Bedez and the curator Emmanuelle Brugerolles.

Due to the latest government regulations the exhibition Jean Bedez, De Sphaera Mundi is not open to the public at the moment. For the moment, it is open by appointment only to professionals in the strictest respect of sanitary conditions.

The exhibition “De sphaera mundi – Sur la sphère du monde” is an opportunity to present a set of new works by the artist, including an eponymous series made in 2019, as well as three exceptional works created for the occasion. It offers a cosmic exploration revisiting myths, in resonance with the Beaux-Arts de Paris collections.

Jean Bedez's graphite mine drawings offer representations of the contemporary world that function as modern allegories: between political and religious power, entertainment culture or the role of the citizen, they explore the relations of domination in our societies.

The series of drawings “De Sphaera mundi” confronts 12th century planispheres from Gerard of Cremona's The Theory of the Planets with images of a comet observed by the space probe Rosetta; medieval cartographies are telescoped to the latest space technology. The three large drawings are inspired by a sculpture by Michelangelo, dated around 1530 and very damaged by time, representing the battle of Hercules against Cacus. In the works of Jean Bedez, the great Hercules, making Cacus bite the dust, becomes dust himself again. His right arm, the very one that holds his fetish weapon, has disappeared. Ruin wins him, light and darkness clash into a chaotic landscape. It is this damaged, fragile Heracles that Jean Bedez evokes, at least his mediocre aptitude to reach us intact, faithful to himself, the owner without concession of the incredible power which had fallen to him. But mythology is not the only business of the artist, each motif echoes an alchemical, astrophysical, political, poetic, esoteric reality. This is what his works show, the details of an infinite cosmogony and labyrinth that is only at its beginnings.

Graduated from Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2001, Jean Bedez was awarded the Lucien Quintard artistic prize for painting, in 1999, at the Stanislas academy in Nancy for a conceptual graphic work questioning the notion of autograph work and the relationship to Time. Both a sculptor and a draftsman, he has exhibited at the CRAC Languedoc Roussillon, Suzanne Tarasiève Gallery, Albert Baronian Gallery, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs and the Palais de Tokyo.

 

 

From thursday 10 june 2021 to sunday 18 july 2021

Wed. to Sun. 1pm - 7pm (wed. evening schedule 9pm)

Palais des Beaux-Arts (salle Foch)

13 quai Malaquais, 75006 Paris

Major figure on the African artistic scene, Sammy Baloji has been invited by the Festival d'Automne à Paris and Beaux-Arts de Paris, as part of the Africa 2020 season, to present his first solo exhibition in a Parisian institution. Resident at the Villa Medici in Rome in 2019, he presents the results of his research on the political, religious and commercial exchanges that took place between the Kongo kingdom, Portugal and the Vatican as early as the 16th century.

The exhibition brings together two groups of works: a set of drawings and objects made from motifs borrowed from Kongo fabrics, and a selection of tapestries that are part of famous Indian hangings.

Whether by the artist's hand or simply borrowed, these works bear witness to the complexity of a history of exchanges, transactions and exploitation. They show the contextual and institutional effects of a narrative written by Europe and which has in turn treated these works as tools of diplomacy, works of art, ethnographic artefacts or simple decorative elements.

Sammy Baloji was born in 1978 in Lubumbashi (Democratic Republic of Congo). He lives and works between Lubumbashi and Brussels. He graduated in Information and Communication Sciences from the University of Lubumbashi and the Haute École des Arts du Rhin. Since September 2019, he has been conducting a PhD research in art at Sint Lucas Antwerpen entitled "Contemporary Kasala and Lukasa: towards a Reconfiguration of Identity and Geopolitics". He was a resident of the Académie de France in Rome - Villa Medici, in 2019-2020.

Over the past ten years, numerous monographic exhibitions have been devoted to his work: Lund Konsthall and Aarhus Kunsthal (2020), Le Point du Jour, Cherbourg (2019), Framer Framed, Amsterdam (2018), Museumcultuur Strombeek (2018), The Power Plant, Toronto and WIELS, Brussels (2016-2017). He has recently participated in several major international events: Sydney Biennial (2020), Documenta 14 (Cassel/Athens, 2017), Lyon Biennial (2015), Venice Biennial (2015).

 

The exhibition at the Beaux-Arts de Paris is the result of a collective work in which participated:
Lucrezia Cippitelli, art historian, for documentary research on the Italian collections; Anne Lafont, art historian, author of an essay on the contextualization of these tapestries; Jean-Christophe Lanquetin, scenographer, for research and development work around the staging of the exhibition; Inès Di Folco and Elena Valtcheva, for the interpretation of Kongo fabrics on canvas; Cécile Fromont, Associate Professor of Art History at Yale University in the United States and 2020-2021 resident at the Institut d'Études Avancées de Paris // Lighting, Lionel Spycher and William Lambert // Editing, Artcomposit // Exhibition produced by the Festival d'Automne à Paris // In collaboration with the Beaux-Arts de Paris // Event organized as part of the Africa 2020 Season with the support of its Patrons' Committee made up of : Fondation Gilbert et Rose-Marie Chagoury, Orange, Total Foundation, Axian, Groupe Sipromad, JCDecaux, Pernod Ricard, Sanofi, Société Générale, VINCI, CFAO, ENGIE, Thales, Thomson Broadcast and Veolia // With the help of the Cité internationale des arts // With the support of Sylvie Winckler // In partnership with France Culture

 

logo FA

 

www.festival-automne.com

 

 

Photo: Sophie Nuytten

 

RESPONSIBLE TICKETING 

 

2, 5 or 10 €, the choice is yours!

The ticket office in charge invites each visitor coming to discover an exhibition at the Beaux-Arts de Paris to choose his or her entrance ticket from among 3 proposed rates: 2 €, 5 € or 10 €. Contribute according to your means, your passion and your desire for commitment!

Free of charge (on presentation of a valid receipt):

• under 18 years old

• students and teachers of the National Higher Schools of Art and Architecture of the Ministère de la Culture

• students from member institutions of the University of Paris-Sciences-et- Lettres (PSL)

• students of the École du Louvre

• holders of the Ministère de la Culture card

• Amis des Beaux-Arts de Paris

• card holder : Maison des Artistes, ICOM, ICOMOS, Association française des commissaires d’exposition (CEA)

• journalists

• jobseekers, recipients of minimum social benefits

• civilian disabled and war-disabled (with an attendant)

 

From friday 18 september 2020 to saturday 14 november 2020

wed. & sat. 2pm-6pm sun. 12pm-6pm

Château de Rentilly

1 rue de l'Etang, 77600 Bussy-Saint-Martin

Masterpieces from the Beaux-Arts de Paris collection and contemporary art works.

An exhibition designed by Beaux-Arts de Paris new department "Exhibition-related careers". "Exhibition-related careers" is a new professionalization program, offered to 3rd year students of Beaux-Arts de Paris, designed in partnership with Palais de Tokyo.

Frac Île-de-france, the castle / Cultural Park of Rentilly - Michel Chartier

Jean-Michel Alberola, Ismaïl Bahri, Evgen Bavcar, Hicham Berrada, Christian Boltanski, Xavier Boussiron, Flora Bouteille, Pierre Louis Deseine, Jean Baptiste Désoria, Marcel Duchamp, Albrecht Dürer, Nina Galdino, Matthias Garcia, Jacques-Fabien Gautier d'Agoty, Théodore Géricault, Francisco de Goya, Graham Gussin, Lucien Hervé, Hans Holbein the Younger, Pierre Huyghe, Claire Isorni, Ann-Veronica Janssens, Christian Lhopital, Marc Lochner, Antoine Marquis, Bernhard Martin, Romain Moncet, Damien Moulierac, Alicia Paz, Benoît Pype, Valentin Ranger, Hugues Reip, Bettina Samson, Pierre-Alexandre Savriacouty, Alain Séchas, Valérie Sonnier, Victor Yudaev, Tereza Zelenková...

In reference to the famous theme cabaret installed at the end of the 19th century in Montmartre, which deployed its parodic and funereal atmosphere by playing with a sulphureous irony of macabre situations, Frac Île-de-France and Communauté d'Agglomération de Marne et Gondoire present, at Château de Rentilly, "Le Cabaret du Néant", an exhibition designed by Beaux-Arts de Paris new department "Exhibition-related careers", which associates contemporary artists with masterpieces of Beaux-Arts de Paris collection.

From the tragic to the parodic, depending on the evolution of society and its morals, religious convictions as well as scientific discoveries, the subject "remember that you are going to die" runs through art and literature. Since the famous macabre dances appeared in the 15th century, it has never ceased to challenge the public and creators, while undergoing profound transformations. Contemporary to the famous "Cabaret du Néant" installed in 1892 on Boulevard de Clichy (18th arrondissement), which gives the exhibition its title, the notion of nothingness has another interpretation, another vision of the same abyss, no less terrible but plastically reversed; that which, in the wake of Mallarmé, leads us to consider human life as "vain forms of matter (…) necessarily rushing into the dream that it knows not to be (…) and proclaiming, before the Nothing that is the truth, these glorious lies!". According to Mallarmé, the role of the port, and therefore the art, consists in drawing man out of this "Nothing", as it from the bottom of a shipwreck, through the supreme game of creation.

 

Frac île-de-france, the castle
Rentilly Cultural Park - Michel Chartier 
1, rue de l'Étang 
77600 Bussy-Saint-Martin 
T +33 (0)1 60 35 46 72 

fraciledefrance.com

Download the press release

 


 

 

From wednesday 21 february 2018 to sunday 20 may 2018

Palais des Beaux-Arts

13 quai Malaquais, 75006

Curators: Philippe Artières and Éric de Chassey

Fruit of the joint perspectives of two often opposing disciplines, the history of art and history, this exhibition offers a documented reading of this particular moment in contemporary history, the years 1968-1974, when art and politics, creativity and social and political struggles were intimately entwined.

The exhibition is not a visual history of politics but a political history of visual works. It presents posters, paintings, sculptures, installations, films, photographs, leaflets, journals, books and magazines, including some 150 publications available for consultation in an open library.

Beginning with major demonstrations against the Vietnam War, dwelling on the Atelier Populaire des Beaux-Arts of May and June 1968 and, in the following years, items recovered from Parisian boulevards, factories, mines, universities, prisons and many other places throughout France, a long procession is unveiled.

Palais des Beaux-Arts
13 quai Malaquais
Paris 6e

Download press kit
 

 

 

 

From monday 1 october 2018 to friday 11 january 2019

Cabinet de dessins Jean Bonna

14 rue Bonaparte, 75006

This autumn Beaux-Arts de Paris unveils part of its collection of more than 40,000 architectural drawings, exhibiting thirty-four watercolors on architectural projects designed during the training of young architects under the Second Empire.

The drawings on display, dated between 1848 and 1867, constitute a veritable visual memory of the academic teaching dispensed to students in the architecture section and provide a mirror for the architectural trends of the second half of the 19th century.

Curated by Emmanuelle Brugerolles. 

14, rue Bonaparte
75006 Paris

Download press release

Vue de l'exposition

 

 

From friday 12 october 2018 to saturday 5 january 2019

Beaux-Arts de Paris

14 rue Bonaparte, 75006

Nairy Baghramian is the guest of the 2018 Paris Festival d'Automne. Born in 1971 in Isfahan (Iran), she lives and works in Berlin. Last year her work was presented at several major international events such as Documenta in Cassel, the Skulptur Projekt in Münster and the Biennale in Lyon. Several solo exhibitions have recently been devoted to her in museums such as the Reina Sofia in Madrid (2018), the Walker Art Museum in Mineapolis (2017), SMAK in Ghent (2017) and Museo Tamayo in Mexico (2015).

Her exhibition at Beaux-Arts de Paris is her first solo exhibition in France. 

14, rue Bonaparte
75006 Paris

Download press release
 

 

 

 

From friday 12 october 2018 to saturday 5 january 2019

Palais des Beaux-Arts

13 quai Malaquais, 75006

The discovery of the work of Georges Focus from the period of his confinement at the Petites Maisons arouses an overwhelming sense of astonishment today, not to mention shock. It inspires us with a feeling of something new, something never seen before, and challenges our received ideas.

Georges Focus, member of the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture under Louis XIV, produced two separate streams of work: public, Academy art on the one hand, personal and intimate, on the other.

This astonishing corpus, brought together in France for the first time at the Palais des Beaux-Arts, comprising around 80 drawings as well as prints and paintings from the University of Edinburgh, private collections and public institutions including Beaux-Arts de Paris, bears witness to his unique trajectory.

The exhibition is an opportunity to explore the exceptional and unique œuvre of an artist suffering from madness at the time of Louis XIV.

Curated by Emmanuelle Brugerolles

Palais des Beaux-Arts
13, Quai Malaquais
75006 Paris

 

Download press release

 

 

From friday 12 october 2018 to saturday 5 january 2019

Palais des Beaux-Arts

13 quai Malaquais, 75006

In parallel with the exhibition Georges Focus (1644-1708), La folie d'un peintre sous Louis XIV, the exhibition Robert Walser - Grosse kleine Welt Grand petit monde presents a choice of around fifty “microgrammes” by writer Robert Walser for the first time in France.

Robert Walser composed prose texts or poems in pencil in tiny writing on fragments of paper of various origins (telegrams, calendar pages, letters from publishers). These “microgrammes” were not deciphered and transcribed until long after his death.

An exhibition designed by Marie José Burki and Richard Venlet.

In partnership with the Robert Walser-Zentrum in Bern and the Swiss National Library, part of the SACRe/ARP doctoral level studies and with the support of Swiss Cultural Foundation, Pro Helvetia. 

Download press release
 

 

 

From thursday 24 january 2019 to saturday 23 february 2019

Chapelle des Petits-Augustins

14 rue Bonaparte, 75006

Formes Limites is an exhibition dedicated to ceramics and brings together works of art, ceramic works, design objects and elements from the field of manufacturing. It sheds light on the sculptural potential of these materials. Each of the works presented testifies to a specific approach to ceramics and its shaping. Taught at Beaux-Arts de Paris, ceramics asserts a place in our era thanks to its technical and aesthetic qualities. The exhibition, held in the Chapelle des Petits-Augustins in a unique décor of sculpted and painted 19th century copies, testifies to a renewed interest in a technique which gives pride of place to know-how and manual production.

Featured artists: Philippe Barde, Karen Bennicke, Emmanuel Boos, Pia Camil, Tony Cragg, Ceràmica Cumella, Martine Damas, Richard Deacon, Helen Marten, Koyo Matsui, Ryo Mikami, Emilie Pedron, Bettina Pousttchi, Lucie Rie, Fumio Shimada, Ettore Sottsass, Takashi Tanaka, Makoto Toyofuku, Kato Toyohisa, Marc Uzan, Élise Vandewalle, Betty Woodman, Naoki Yamamoto.

Curator and scenographer: Jessica Boubetra.

Chapelle des Petits Augustins
14, rue Bonaparte
75006 Paris
Entrée libre

Download press release
 

 

 

Debug Vue : ID: