Don't stop at this one.
See all exhibitionsHandpicked from the same exhibitions lineup, scored for this weekend.
PAINTING
Renoir and Love
Musée d'Orsay examines Auguste Renoir's colourful, joyful paintings of guinguettes and public balls. His work reflects an original vision of modernity guided by love as both a human force and the artist's gaze on his subjects, the world, and painting itself.
EXHIBITIONS
Nan Goldin. This Will Not End Well
Nan Goldin presents her first French retrospective of video work and slideshows - 'films made of photographs'. Grand Palais showcases an intimate journey through her life, friendships, loves and activism.
EXHIBITIONS
Matisse 1941-1954
In the bright light of his final years, Matisse invented a new language of cut forms and pure colour. Over 230 paintings, drawings, books and cut gouaches span his free and restless journey from 1941 to 1954.
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
Alexandre Lenoir: By the Force of Things
Musée de l'Orangerie. Alexandre Lenoir paints dreamlike landscapes with phantom figures, working from photographs he treats as memories. His approach seeks alchemic transformation rather than faithful representation, allowing nature an element of chance.
PAINTING
Henri Rousseau: The Ambition of Painting
Musée de l'Orangerie presents a monographic exhibition of Henri Rousseau in collaboration with the Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia. Major loans from international institutions reveal an unprecedented corpus of works once held by dealer Paul Guill.
EXHIBITIONS
Leonora Carrington
Pioneer artist, feminist, ecologist, mother, migrant, and spiritual seeker, Leonora Carrington left an extraordinary and radical artistic legacy.
EXHIBITIONS
A Day in the Eighteenth Century: Chronicle of a Mansion
Immersive exhibition exploring daily life within an eighteenth-century aristocratic mansion: masters, servants, and pets inhabiting an intimate domestic world.








