Don't stop at this one.
See all exhibitionsHandpicked from the same exhibitions lineup, scored for this weekend.
EXHIBITIONS
Imaginary Maps. Inventing Worlds
Maps trace known lands but also give form to imaginary territories that extend, reinterpret or personalise the real world. BnF's exhibition explores links between cartography and imagination at the frontier of reality and fiction.
EXHIBITIONS
Matisse, 1941-1954
At Grand Palais, this exhibition illuminates Matisse's prolific final years, presenting three hundred works of unprecedented vitality: drawings, cut gouaches, illustrated books, textiles, and stained glass.
EXHIBITIONS
The Superpower of Deaf People: Nikesco's Carte Blanche
Bibliothèque Saint-Éloi welcomes author Nicolas Combes, known as Nikesco, with a vibrant exhibition from January to August 2026.
EXHIBITIONS
Byblos, Eternal City
Explore the world's first international maritime port. Byblos linked ancient Lebanon, Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Aegean world, shaped relations with pharaohs and played a pivotal role in spreading the Phoenician alphabet.
EXHIBITIONS
Leonora Carrington
Pioneer artist, feminist, ecologist, mother, migrant, and spiritual seeker, Leonora Carrington left an extraordinary and radical artistic legacy.
SCULPTURE
War and Peace: Anguish, Terror, Hope
Ateliers-musée Chana Orloff explores how sculptor Chana Orloff represented twentieth-century conflicts through her work, confronting historical violence.
EXHIBITIONS
Art as Healing - Blida-Joinville Psychiatric Hospital, 1960s
Archives, painted ceramics, and gouache drawings from sociotherapy workshops at the Blida-Joinville Hospital in 1960s Algeria, a centre marked by Frantz Fanon's influence. A newly acquired collection presented in historical context.
EXHIBITIONS
The Invisible Workshop. Behind the Scenes of Jean-Jacques Annaud's Films
Fondation Jérôme Seydoux-Pathé opens the doors to film sets of a master director. An unprecedented immersion into the production of his greatest masterpieces, revealing the craft and vision behind them.








