EXPOSITION GÉNÉRALE AT FONDATION CARTIER
JEAN NOUVEL'S ARCHITECTURAL PROJECT
October 25, 2025 – August 23, 2026
EXPOSITION GÉNÉRALE AT
FONDATION CARTIER
October 25, 2025 – August
23, 2026
Exposition Générale
retraces forty years of international contemporary art through emblematic works
and fragments of exhibitions that have shaped the programming of the Fondation
Cartier pour l’art contemporain since its founding in 1984. Illustrating the institution’s
history and openness to the world, it highlights major pieces in its
collection, which has evolved over the years as a reflection of this
programming, and offers visitors the opportunity to rediscover nearly 600 works
by over 100 artists.
The title Exposition
Générale refers to the exhibitions organized by the Grands Magasins du Louvre
department store starting in the late 19th century, in the very Haussmannian
building the Fondation Cartier now occupies, originally constructed for the
first Parisian Exposition Universelle in 1855. Bringing together objects and
goods of all kinds, these events broadened the cultural field and facilitated
the circulation of new knowledge. Jean Nouvel’s architectural project engages
with the building’s new legacy, reimagining the space in a way that opens
the door to new approaches to exhibition-making. T he exhibition
design, by Formafantasma, references the material history of display systems,
exploring and reactivating the social and experimental aspects of these
commercial exhibitions that have influenced the evolution of museum practices.
EXPOSITION GÉNÉRALE: A
NEW MAP OF CONTEÖPORARY ARTISTIC PRODUCTION
Reflecting the multitude
of artistic commitments embraced by the institution and structured around four
broad themes, Exposition Générale sketches an alternative map of contemporary
artistic production that reinterprets the encyclopedic museum model:
an ephemeral architectural laboratory (Machines d’architecture); a
reflection on living worlds and their preservation (Être nature); a space for
experimentation with materials and techniques (Making Things); and visionary
narratives that blend science, technology, and fiction (Un monde réel). In
addition to this thematic organization, the exhibition includes series and
presentations of works that trace the individual and collaborative paths of key
artists from the Fondation Cartier collection.
MACHINES D ’ARCHITECTURE
On the first platform of
the exhibition space designed by Jean Nouvel, Machines d’architecture envisions
a city reinvented through anti-monuments, models of utopian cities,
and unbuilt or imaginary projects. Within the museum, architecture is not
only displayed, but traversed and interrogated—examined in its
social role, cultural impact, and its uses, transforming
the exhibition into a space for experimentation. Machines d’architecture
offers an expansive reading of the architectural discipline, reflecting its
diversity of approaches. Throughout the exhibition, architecture is
examined through its legacies, its materiality, and its contemporary
relevance, and explored through a range of forms—drawings,
prototypes, installations, and full-scale reconstructions. Together, these
varied explorations overlay the Haussmannian heritage with multiple ways
of considering, experiencing, and conceiving space. They present alternative
visions that claim architecture as a transformative force, capable of
articulating new futures.
In his Petite
Cathédrale, a small-scale ecumenical church, master designer and architect
Alessandro Mendini plays with scale to unsettle the senses, blurring the
boundaries between art, design, and architecture. In Chapel of Valley,
architect Junya Ishigami seeks to free the discipline from its legacies,
imagining a future in which the divide between nature and architecture nearly
disappears. By contrast, Kinshasa: Project for the Third Millennium, one
of the “extreme maquettes” by sculptor Bodys Isek Kingelez, and
the meticulously detailed, bird’s-eye urban landscapes of Mamadou Cissé,
propose progressive, utopian visions of urbanism, illustrating both its
profound influence on the organization of society and the power of individuals
within it. Visible from the Rue de Rivoli, the Salón de eventos,
a colorful ballroom specially created by architect Freddy Mamani for the
Fondation Cartier’s new site, stands as a vivid reminder of the power
of architecture to shape cultural worlds.
ÊTRE NATURE
Mindful of the
relationship between art and the living world, Exposition Générale invites
visitors to listen, look, and learn from all forms of life. Être nature brings
the forest into the building—not as a counterpoint to the city—but as an
ecosystem equal to the urban environment in richness and complexity, where
cohabitation is tangible. The exhibition is centered on groups of works that
carry the echoes of landscapes, living languages, and soundscapes in different
spaces of the building.
Être nature gathers works
from regions as varied as Vendée, the Amazon, the Massif Central, and Oceania’s
island territories. Through their materiality and symbolism, these works
interrogate the relationship between humans and their natural environment,
as well as the stories, traditions, and knowledge that emerge from
it.
The section explores
art’s role in transforming our relationship with the living world, and in
nurturing the creation of a new ecological ethic. The works assembled here give
form to narratives that question the museum’s responsibility to conserve the
living world and present the exhibition as a space for expressing
its forms and languages—forms and languages that are inseparable
from, and indispensable to, the interpretation of human cultures.
Suspended at the center of the section, Miracéus is a monumental installation by Solange Pessoa, composed of thousands of bird feathers. Imbued with spirituality and shamanic resonance, it invites viewers to plunge into the wild, animal core of humanity. Claudia Andujar’s photography series and the drawings by members of the Yanomami community address the disappearance of Indigenous peoples in the northern Amazon, and their struggle to preserve their lands and culture. Lothar Baumgarten’s immersive practice, employing ethnographic methods, documents the singularity of their threatened way of life and interrogates the colonial legacies that endanger Indigenous existence. The relationship between people, land, language, and history is also central to the photographic and cinematic work of Raymond Depardon.
Nature is a major source of inspiration for Bruno Novelli and Santidio Pereira, leading figures in a new generation of Brazilian artists, whose works reflect the diversity of its motifs and forms, evoking a complete fusion among the spheres of the living world. Linking these practices to a wider network of references, the exhibition fosters dialogue between different geographies and also incorporates elements of Western heritage: Giuseppe Penone draws both his inspiration and his materials from the forest, capturing the imprint of natural forms through sculpture and rubbing; Robert Adams’s photography captures the vast beauty of the American West, alongside the scars left by industrial growth, consumerism, and pollution. At the heart of the urban setting, the building’s underground level houses Night Would Not Be Night Without the Cricket, a sound installation created specifically for the Fondation Cartier’s new building by pioneering bioacoustician Bernie Krause in collaboration with Soundwalk Collective. Composed from 5,000 hours of field recordings of natural sounds, it transforms the subterranean space into an immersive, sonic forest.
MAKING THINGS
Making Things embodies a
broad vision of contemporary art. By valuing encounters and permeability
between disciplines, the exhibition seeks to redraw the boundaries between fine
and applied arts, institutional and self-taught practices, and to
decompartmentalize artistic mediums.
Bringing together
cross-disciplinary approaches, Making Things asserts experimentation as a
working method. The artists reinterpret ancestral techniques to explore
their contemporary significance. Materiality, forms, know-how, and
production processes become vehicles for storytelling, memory, and transmission.
Sculptural, textile, ceramic, and pictorial practices are transformed,
hybridized, and revitalized for new purposes and uses at the intersection of
art, applied arts, craft, and design. Through this plurality of gestures and
techniques, Making Things offers an inclusive reading of contemporary artistic
production, challenging cultural hierarchies and paving the way for new
formal possibilities in the future.
This section renews the
ethos of the eponymous 1988 exhibition devoted to the creative work of Issey
Miyake, blending craft, technology, and material exploration. With his
“gazebo”—a square roofless structure with walls of thin steel bars, situated
beneath the building’s f ifth platform—Andrea Branzi reveals his vision of
a “weak and diffuse” architecture, in which flexibility and permeability
prevail over a rigid structure. For Branzi, this is a response to new user
needs and the fluidity of contemporary society. Opposite this structure,
Muro en rojos, Olga de Amaral’s monumental work, reflects her explorations of
the occupation of space undertaken at the end of the 1960s, with
pieces gradually freed from the wall to become mobile, architectural
elements in their own right. Gustavo Perez delves into ceramics through a
subtle interplay between structure and surface; while Jean-Michel Othoniel
revitalizes the use of glass in sculpture. T he figurines of the Brazilian
artists Véio, carved from pieces of dead wood, and Izabel Mendez Da Cunha,
modeled in ceramic and inspired by everyday life, reveal practices deeply
rooted in their environment —serving as a tribute to the history, spirituality,
and folk art of Brazil’s Nordeste region, from which the two artists hail.
Finally, these material explorations engage in dialogue with works that
transcend the conventions of painting: Simon Hantaï investigates the plastic
potential of canvas through folding; Gérard Garouste reimagines the
relationship between painting and language, drawing from myth and literature;
Damien Hirst and Joan Mitchell experiment with the energy and physicality of
the painter’s gesture to depict nature.
UN MONDE RÉEL
Un monde réel explores
the relationship between science, fiction, and artistic creation. This section
of the exhibition brings together artists and researchers, who harness their
creativity for projects that draw on mathematical languages, scientific
data, and technological universes to imagine new ways of perceiving and
representing reality. Through immersive installations, maps, photography
series, and audiovisual works, Un monde réel brings together tales of
exploration tied to progress, astronomy, and dystopian and technological
visions. Some works are grounded in real data, offering precise readings
of contemporary issues—climate, migration, space exploration— while imagining
evolving forms capable of adapting to transformations of the world they
reflect.
Other works draw on
fiction or dreams, which —alongside science—represent two essential dimensions
through which artists interpret, analyze, and invent reality. Un monde réel
juxtaposes different forms of knowledge and ways of interpreting the world. T
he works perceptively chart the present and its possible futures, interrogating
modern fascination with technology and its ambivalences—embracing utopia
and havoc, creation and destruction, speculation and threat.
Opening this section,
Tracing Falling Sky by Sarah Sze explores how the proliferation of digital
images has altered our relationship to time, memory, and objects, inviting
viewers to experience the ever-thinner boundary between material and virtual.
EXIT, the immersive installation created in 2008 by Diller Scofidio + Renfro,
based on an original idea by the philosopher Paul Virilio, uses data
collected by scientists to map different types of migratory flows caused by
economic, political, and climatic factors. The installation has been updated in
2025 for the inaugural exhibition of the Fondation Cartier, Place du
Palais-Royal.
Panamarenko’s utopian
submarine conjures the spirit of exploration that defined modern times, while
the drawings of Shantaram Chintya Tumbada, an artist from the Indian Warli
community, reinterpret ancestral myths, using visual play to propose an
original reading of human invention. Fascinated by contemporary cosmology, the
Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang connects ancient knowledge with a global vision of
the universe—embracing Earth, the planets, and the cosmos through the use of
gunpowder. In his work, this ancient Chinese invention becomes a symbol
of our technological and nuclear age.
Un monde réel also
explores the possible points of convergence between mathematics and art,
and their shared drive to make and remake reality through research and
exploration, in the works of Jessica Wynne and Jean-Michel Alberola. These
stand alongside the dreamlike drawings of Mœbius, in which the boundaries
between human, animal, plant, and mineral dissolve, revealing the artist’s
fascination with metaphysical questions; and Paul Virilio’s photography series,
which evokes an anachronistic world, f loating between past and future,
relics and post apocalyptic visions.
SOLO AND COLLABORATIVE
EXHIBITIONS
The exhibition itinerary
is structured around these four thematic sections, which also spotlight
the works of major artists with whom the Fondation Cartier has built
decades-long relationships, represented in its collection through
significant pieces and series. T hese include Graciela Iturbide, Chéri
Samba, Matthew Barney, Patti Smith, William Eggleston, Francesca Woodman, and
Tadanori Yokoo. The itinerary also incorporates spaces specially designed to
showcase single, emblematic works: masterpieces, by the likes of Vija Celmins,
James Lee Byars, Bill Viola, James Turrell, Joan Mitchell, and Damien Hirst,
recalling iconic exhibitions that have marked the Fondation Cartier’s history.
At times, the Fondation
has embraced encounters, fostering relationships of creative and conceptual
affinity. Exposition Générale revisits some of these moments of collaboration,
recreating novel examples of shared projects sparked by such encounters,
for example, between the painter Peter Halley and the architect Alessandro
Mendini; the artists Raymond Hains and Pierrick Sorin; photographers Fernell
Franco and Oscar Muñoz; and architect Bijoy Jain, the ceramicist Alev Ebüzziya
Siesbye, and video artist Ali Kazma. These are not group exhibitions in
the conventional sense, but rather close collaborations that emerged from
extraordinary human and artistic encounters.
ALESSANDRO
MENDINI
Petite
Cathédrale,2002
Wood, Metal,
Glass Paste Mosaic, Glass, Perfume, Sound
Dimensions: 527 × 239 ×
319 cm Acquisition 2002
Acquisition 2002
BODY ISEK
KINGELEZ
Projet pour
le Kinshasa
du Troisième
Millénaire, 1997
Wood,
Cardboard, Foamboard, Paper, Metal, Various Materials
Dimensions: 100
× 332 × 332 cm approx.
Acquisition 1998
ALESSANDRO
MENDINI & PETER HALLEY
Code Warrior,1997
Peintures
Acrylique, Fluorescente et Métallique Sur Toile Diptyque,
Dimensions:
257,5 × 120,5 × 9,5 cm
Acquisition
1999
Wood, Acrylic
Painting
Dimensions:
525 × 435 × 100 cm
Acquisition 2014
CHRISTINA
BOLTANSKI
Absalon
Propositions
d’habitations, 1990
Wood, Cardboard, Plaster, Acrylicpaint,
Fluorescent
Tubes, Metal
Dimensions:
108 × 610 × 610 cm
Acquisition 1990
ABSALON
Propositions
d’habitations, 1990
Wood, Cardboard, Plaster, Acrylicpaint,
Fluorescent
Tubes, Metal
Dimensions:
108 × 610 × 610 cm
Acquisition 1990
ANNETTE
MESSAGER
Mes Ouvrages, 1988
70 Framed
Gelatin Silver Prints, Colored Pencil
Dimensions
Variables
Acquisition
1996
© Annette Messager / Adagp, Paris, 2025
ANDREI UJICÃ,
Unknown Quantıty, 2003 - 2005
PANAMARENKO
Panama,
Spitzbergen,
Nova Zemblaya, 1996
Steel,
Acrylic Glass, Paint, Engine, Fluorescent Tubes,
Camera,
Monitor, Various Materials
Dimensions: 600
× 705 × 344 cm
Acquisition 1998
MAKUNAIMÎ
Cria o
Espelho Universal, 2021.
Acrylic on
Canvas
Dimensions: 111×223 cm.
Collection of
the Fondation Cartier Pour l’art Contemporain
© Jaider Esbell Estate
JEAN – MICHEL OTHONIEL
Paysage Amoureux, 1997
Murano Glass, Red and
Mauve Amber, Nylon Threads
Dimensions Variable
Acquisition 1998
© Jean-Michel Othoniel/
Adagp, Paris, 2025
A glass work :
Jean-Michel Othoniel, Paysage amoureux, 1997
Since the late 1980s,
Jean-Michel Othoniel has been seeking to reinvent sculptural practice, bringing
back the use of precious materials in a language that is at once poetic and
symbolic. Paysage amoureux is composed of strings of beads adorned with
rings and blown glass hearts, a technique the artist has turned into his
signature. Playing with the geometry and repetition of elements and motifs,
this sculpture is reminiscent of jewelry. Behind its apparent formal lightness,
the work presents objects symbolizing romantic passion and celebrates an erotic
relationship to the body, in a drive to re-enchant human relationships, in
their vulnerability and beauty. More than merely ornamental, for the artist,
beauty is a way of striving for humans’ harmonization with their environment.
EXIT 2008‑2025
DillerScofidio
+ Renfro, Mark Hansen,
Laura Kurgan
et Ben Rubin, en collaboration avec
Robert Gerard
Pietrusko et Stewart Smith
22 min 43 s
Diamètre de
l’installation : 8,8 m
Hauteur de l’installation : 4 m
SARAH SZE
Tracing Fallen Sky, 2020
Version 2025
Mixed Media, Stainless
Steel, Marbledust, Archival Pigment Prints,
Video Projector, Pendulum
Dimensions Variable
Acquisition 2022
2025 Update
Since
the late 1990s, Sze has been assembling and curating objects from daily life,
and using them to create delicate, complex installations that challenge the
boundaries between painting, sculpture and architecture. She has also introduced
video into her oeuvre, exploring the ways in which a proliferation of images
can transform our relationships with objects, time and memory. She gathers
objects and images from both the physical and digital world, which she goes on
to piece together into complex multimedia works that challenge notions of
scale, inviting the viewer to both microscopic observation, and a macroscopic
perspective on the infinite. Sze makes use of several media, from sculpture to
painting by way of drawing, engraving, video and installations. Her work
notably questions notions of entropy and temporality, and explores the
ephemeral nature of materiality.
FONDATION CARTIER
A PLACE FOR THE
UNEXPECTED BY JEAN NOUVEL
I have always imagined
the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain as a haven, a welcoming sanctuary
where everyone is invited to discover the art of today. Not just another
neutral gallery, but a dynamic space of uninhibited inspiration, a grand
workshop that adapts to artists’ works and ideas. The building’s mission is to
redefine spaces and introduce new ways to exhibit that harmonize with history,
while also unveiling that history’s essence. Repurposing the building at
2 Place du Palais-Royal in this way meant making it more open and generous
toward Paris, but also more representative of the city. By nurturing the
emergence of new art forms here, the Fondation Cartier doubly enriches the
space: it welcomes history into the heart of the Fondation Cartier and instils
creation in the heart of the city.
he Fondation Cartier is
not simply its new building—it is a neighborhood in the district of the
Palais-Royal, where its identity must be expressed in an exceptional way.
Perhaps it could be the final element in this urban composition, among
the strategic, administrative, cultural, and political landmarks
surrounding Place du Palais-Royal. These buildings, shaped by different eras,
have accumulated layers of history—creating, enriching, and contrasting with
one another. At street level, the fully glazed facade along Rue de Rivoli and
Rue Saint-Honoré allows the gaze to traverse the space from one street to
another, blurring the boundaries between interior and exterior. This
transparency of the side facades reinforces a sense of belonging to the streets
and history of Paris, in the same way that the overhead glass roofs, planted
with trees, create a suspended grove through whose canopy the eye perceives
the light and shadows that change with time and the exhibitions, and
the sun’s rays that blend with the motifs created by the hues of nature and the
colors of the sky. This sense of boundless space is also felt from
Place du Palais-Royal: the interior of the Haussmannian block, open along its
full length, provides a 150-meter view as far as Rue de Marengo. T he focus of
the architectural approach was to unveil the void—its depth, its height, its
presence. It must be understood that contemporary architecture is
increasingly moving in this direction. The concept is no longer about
constructing a space but of building inside space itself. This void becomes the
place for expression—the promise of endless possibilities.
Moving into such an
impressive place as this—on account of its location and history—entails an act
of invention, but not necessarily something manifested in steel or stone.
Rather, what takes root is a different way of doing things—a way of thinking
that prioritizes artists’ greatest possible freedom of expression. A place
like this requires boldness, a fearless creativity that artists might not
exhibit in other institutional settings. Like the Greeks, I have always
believed that a museum is the perfect place to generate ideas,
to discuss them, to be present, to be elsewhere, to be inside, to be
outside, to be in the city… My goal is to offer this possibility in each of my
projects of this kind. Architecture is a testament to its era. The most
important aspect is the change in perspective —the ability to reveal what is
directly linked to history.
he architectural design
of the Fondation Cartier building on Boulevard Raspail was undoubtedly
initially elusive: the significance of the “almost nothing,” the way the
architectural elements blend seamlessly without asserting themselves, the
changing light that alters with the seasons, responding to budding leaves, to
rain… It is a building of presence.
At the Palais-Royal, this
continuous interplay of variations unfolds inside. In this architectural
space, which retains only the characteristic facade and a few structural
elements from the 19th century, one feels as if enveloped by an industrial
cathedral distinguished by an airy yet expansive framework. It emanates
a strong presence and power through its five steel platforms, with their
evident mobility, which contrast starkly with the building’s Haussmannian
exterior. It’s a little like a gigantic theater, where massive floors
can be raised—a concealed dynamic. The space’s true innovation lies in its
adaptability, accommodating all possible altimetries, all the varying
intensities of light, even to the point of complete darkness, depending
on the degree of closure of the glass roofs and side facades.
It is probable that the
Fondation Cartier will be the institution offering the greatest versatility in
its spaces, the most ways to exhibit, and the widest range
of perspectives. The strength of its platforms allows for the display
of extremely heavy works and entirely new means of exposition. The aim is to
achieve what would be impossible elsewhere, and to reinvent the very
manner of exhibition. It is an approach that sets the stage for uniquely
distinctive exhibitions, fashioned by the imaginations of artists,
curators, and scenographers. It is a space of limitless possibilities, where
environments can be towering, deep, or the most compressed possible.
Depending on the configuration chosen, these geometrically variable spaces will
be continuously reinvented and explored with each project. This very adaptation
is what should leave a lasting impression—the fact that this evolving space,
visible from Rue de Rivoli and Rue Saint-Honoré, never ceases to surprise.
It is vital to keep pace
with the spirit of our time, to be fully immersed in the art of the
moment. This can only happen if this haven grants artists complete freedom
to express their works, and that the floors, walkways, and ceilings are
similarly unrestricted. The space is a foundation for invention—for the
inspired, and, naturally, for artists as true inventors. Each empty space
becomes an opportunity for expression. Every surface—the floors, walls,
columns, and glass roofs— serves to provoke thought. Every opening frames
a view, inviting exploration from every perspective. Every material, every
color, every unexpected detail is there to inspire the artists, to
challenge them, to spur them toward transformation if that is what they want.
Everything has been conceived to foster and provoke invention, to evoke
emotion. The Fondation Cartier will be a place for the unexpected, drawing
us into the magnetic attraction of 21st-century Paris. Its purpose is to
disorient, to offer a fresh perspective on the place of art in the city’s life—in
its streets, its squares…
A living, thriving
art scene, in the very heart of Paris.
FONDATION CARTIER
FOREWORD
Alain Dominique Perrin
President of the
Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain
Chris Dercon
Managing Director of the
Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain
In October 2025, the
Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain leaves its premises at 261 Boulevard
Raspail and moves to the center of Paris. Its new address, 2 Place du
Palais-Royal, opposite the Louvre, is a historic 1855 building whose interior
volumes underwent a radical redesign by the architect Jean Nouvel.
The new spaces expand upon the principles of the Raspail building the
architect designed for the Fondation Cartier: made entirely of glass and steel,
the transparent structure and its play with immateriality shook up
exhibition practices upon opening in 1994. Today Jean Nouvel’s new
architectural project continues to explore architecture’s potential
to reshape the esthetics of the museum, doing so this time within a
Haussmannian building that dates back to 1855, which previously housed the
Grand Hôtel du Louvre (1855–1887), then the Grands Magasins du Louvre
(1887–1974), and finally the Louvre des Antiquaires (1978–2019). The governing
principle of the spaces is a mechanism that enables a myriad of possible
transformations of the interior of the building in service to artistic
intention and exhibition design. Behind the fully preserved exterior, we find
a dynamic architecture composed of five mobile platforms which allow the
creation of an unexpected range of volumes, voids, and spaces, firmly placing
the design of the exhibition space at the heart
of the institution’s artistic program.
he dynamic architecture
of the Fondation Cartier is itself inscribed in a history of architecture in
which Paris has played a major role. In 1925, the International Exhibition of
Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts marked the beginning of an architectural
revolution. On this occasion, the modern decorative arts workshops of the
booming department stores showcased presentations in which applied art and
industrial production techniques converged, establishing them as key players of
the architectural innovations of the time. The Studium Louvre pavilion,
a shopping mall designed by French architect Albert Laprade for the
Grands Magasins du Louvre, was erected alongside the international pavilions
on the Esplanade des Invalides and contributed to endowing
architecture with a key role in the development of the modern
exhibition. Other architectural presentations also embodied this revolution
which was soon to unfold, and the conflicting ideologies that would accompany
them: Le Corbusier’s Pavillon de l’Esprit Nouveau, the City in Space
structure designed by Frederick J. Kiesler for the Austrian section, and, above
all, the Soviet pavilion by Konstantin Melnikov—a pioneering Cubist
edifice—heralded the dawn of a mobile and fluid form of architecture.
It was also at this same 1925 exhibition that Jean Prouvé was awarded a
diploma of honor for his utilitarian, modular furniture. Later, he would join
forces with architects Eugène Beaudouin and Marcel Lods, as well as engineer
Vladimir Bodiansky, to design the dynamic architecture of the Maison du Peuple
in Clichy (1939). With its modular floors and walls, the building was
the first attempt at creating a multifunctional space, whose ambition was
to offer the greatest flexibility and possibilities to its users.
Another Parisian landmark
that aspired to modularity was the Centre Georges Pompidou,
whose initial project, designed by Richard Rogers and Renzo Piano in
1971, featured mobile levels. Here, museum architecture was already being
conceived in response to the multiplicity of uses it was intended to
accommodate, some even unknown at the time. The Centre Georges Pompidou
was inspired by Cedric Price’s Fun Palace, an educational and cultural
complex commissioned in 1960 by theater director Joan Littlewood for
London’s East End. The site was supposed to host an interactive
multidisciplinary program, capable of adapting to the changing social
conditions of the day. Although it was never actually built, the Fun Palace had
a decisive influence on the architecture of cultural institutions, their
imperatives, and objectives. In 1994, Cedric Price would write:
“The 21st-century ‘culture center’ will utilize calculated uncertainty and
conscious incompleteness to produce a catalyst for invigorating change, whilst
always producing ‘the harvest of the quiet eye.’”
his pursuit of modular
spaces has prominently featured in projects that transformed the history
of architecture: Rem Koolhaas’s Maison à Bordeaux (1994–1998) and
Lafayette Anticipations (Paris, 2012–2018), as well as The Shed (New York,
2015–2019) designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro. Highly experimental, these
last two projects had to comply with the regulations that public buildings
must adhere to, as well as the challenges that arise with inventing operative
models to program these new types of spaces. Drawing on the lessons
learned from these architectural sites, the new spaces designed by Jean
Nouvel for the Fondation Cartier are in line with these efforts to
design a cultural institution that is both modular and adaptable.
Beyond the dialogue on
the evolution of museum spaces and what they should welcome and make possible,
Jean Nouvel’s architectural project also responds to the historical urban
Parisian context in which it is situated. The Grands Magasins du Louvre once
played an essential role in the heart of the capital’s cultural life. Through
his transformation of the site, Jean Nouvel highlights the existing
architectural and urban elements that exemplify this historical modernity
of the 19th century. The tall picture windows that have been added and which
run along the facades make the building transparent and reveal the
entirety of the interior from one end to the other, forming a visual
system that reinterprets the building’s vitrines, which once allowed passersby
to gaze at the wide variety of objects on display as they strolled by. The
addition of a glass awning, reminiscent of the one that once ran along that
same Rue Saint Honoré and Rue de Marengo, reinforces this unique urban unity
and merges the experiences of the street, the historic arcades, and the
interior spaces. Similarly, the addition of three glass ceilings, equipped with
shutters that vary brightness levels, allows the sky and natural light to
feature as an element in the exhibition spaces. The dynamic architecture is
further strengthened by the porosity that exists with the exterior, profoundly
affecting the visitor’s experience of the building, depending on the season or
time of day it is visited. […]
In a sense, this new
space created for the Fondation Cartier represents a culmination of Jean
Nouvel’s thinking on museum spaces. His vision has been built progressively,
through each of the museum projects he has designed over the past fifty
years. It began theoretically with the competition for the Centre Georges
Pompidou in 1971 and continued with the Institut du monde arabe (1987), the
Fondation Cartier Boulevard Raspail (1994), the Musée du quai Branly
– Jacques Chirac (2006), and the Louvre Abu Dhabi (2017), architectural
projects that can be said to have deconstructed the dominant codes of
museological practices. […]
T he new spaces of the
Fondation Cartier testify to the collaboration between the Fondation and Jean
Nouvel, which spans almost forty years. Beyond the building on the
Boulevard Raspail and the one located on the Place du Palais-Royal, Jean Nouvel
designed multiple projects that reflect the institution’s evolution.
While these spaces
never actually saw the light of day, they have contributed to his theories
about museum spaces. In 1986, he first imagined a glass and steel building
integrated into the landscape of the Montcel Estate in Jouy-en-Josas, where the
Fondation Cartier had been located since 1984. In 2009, as part
of the urban development project for the Île Seguin, he sketched
plans for a concrete and glass structure to house its exhibitions.
Finally, in 2018, Jean Nouvel designed an extension for the Boulevard Raspail
site on the neighboring grounds of the Saint-Vincent-de-Paul Hospital, which
had been abandoned for several years.
T he Fondation Cartier
has always placed the practice of architecture at the heart of its programming,
considering it to be a vector for interdisciplinary dialogue. Today, at 2 Place
du Palais-Royal, the institution materializes a vision of architecture which
enables a merging of disciplines, visual art, performance, theater, science,
and new technologies. Merging with public space, past and future coexist
in a building that is at once an extension of the urban landscape,
a reflection of its history, and the perfect application of a dynamic
architecture at the service of a cultural institution.
VIRGIL ORTIZ
Opera Singer
Mono, 2001
Red Clay From
Cochiti, White Clay, Black Pigments
From Wild
Spinach, String
Dimensions:
56 × 30.5 × 13.5 cm
Acquisition 2001
OLGA DE AMARAL
Muro en Rojos, 1982
Wool, horsehair
Dimensions: 700 ×
830 cm
Acquisition 2025
A textile work : Olga de Amaral, Muro en rojos, 1982
The Colombian artist Olga de Amaral has contributed to the transformation of the textile medium. Measuring seven meters high by eight meters wide, Muro en rojos is part of the Muros tejidos, or “woven walls” series, in which she explores the tridimensionality of textile. Freed both from its decorative function and its dependence on the wall, textile art here displays an entirely sculptural and even architectural quality. Composed of six panels encompassing thousands of cloth strips, this work is emblematic of de Amaral’s experimentations with the relationship between space, color, and material, with inspiration drawn from the landscapes of her native country. With its yellow, ochre, and red colors, the work reflects the artist’s attachment to Colombian landscapes, evoking both fallen autumn leaves, and the bricks of Bogota houses.
SHEROANAWE HAKIHIIWE + FABRICE HYBER
Sans Titre, 2023
Acrylic, Charcoal and Paper Glued on Canvas
Dimensions: 220 × 500 cm
Acquisition 2023
© FabriceHyber / Adagp, Paris, 2025
SOLANGE PESSOA
Miracéus, 2014‑2018
Feathers on Fabric
Dimensions: 455 ×
1110 × 888 cm Approx.
36 Oils on Paper
Dimensions: 67.5 ×
68.5 cm (Each)
Acquisition 2024
Solange Pessoa is a
Brazilian artist, originally from Ferros in the state of Minas Gerais.
She is renowned for her multidisciplinary work and, since the 1980s, has explored themes that are deeply rooted in nature, memory, the body, spirituality, and life cycles, using such varied media as sculpture, painting, video, installations, and drawing. Beyond the dialogue between her artistic practice and Brazilian history, Solange Pessoa's work holds a special place in Brazilian contemporary art. It touches on numerous references as well as on the memory of colonial history and native cosmogonies.
The use of organic matter such as soil, leather, animal fat, feathers, hair, bones, and blood is characteristic of her work. This approach has allowed her to develop a unique, extremely sensorial, and visceral artistic language that alludes to an intimate relationship between humans, animals, plant life, and minerals. With her work, in which she transforms matter, she calls forth primitive, mythical, and ritual forms. By formalising her quest for a deeper relationship with the Earth, its non-human inhabitants, and the history of human origins with her powerful, meditative installations, the artist questions transformation, fertility, the organic, and the sacred.
HUANG YONG
PING
Devons-Nous
Encore Construire
une Grande
Cathédrale?, 1991
Painted Wood,
Papier-Mâché, Inkjet Print Mounted on Dibond
Dimensions
Variable
Acquisition
1992
© Huang Yong Ping / Adagp, Paris, 2025
IZABEL MENDÈS DA CUNHA
Sans Titre, 1999
Céramique Polychrome
Dimensions: 85 x 35 x 30 cm
© Izabel Mendès da Cunha
JIVYA SOMA MASHE
Fıshnet,2009
Photo © Cyril Marcilhacy
BERNIE KRAUSE
& SOUNDWALK COLLECTIVE
Night Would
Not Be Night Without the Cricket 2025
Site-Specificsound
Installation
Dimensions
Variables
A textile work : Olga de Amaral, Muro en rojos, 1982
DAVID HAMMONS
Sans Titre,
1997
Bois, Fer,
Corde, Plastique, Miroir, Peinture
Dimensions:
143 × 40 × 127 cm
Acquisition
1999
Stone, Hair,
Shoe Polish Box
Dimensions:
40.5 × 20 cm
Acquisition
1998
© David Hammons/ Adagp, Paris, 2025
ALESSANDRO
MENDINI
Visage
Archaïque, 2002
Golden Glass
Paste Mosaic, Swarovski Crystal,
Pendant in
Painted Metal, Gold, Glass, Velvet
Dimensions:
208 × 75 × 70 cm
Acquisition 2002
FREDDY MAMANI
Salón de
Eventos, 2018
Version 2025
Protocol for
Architectural Installation
Dimensions
Variable
Acquisition
2024
2025 Update
ANDREA BRANZI
Gazebo, 2008
White
Lacquered Steel Structure, Stainlesssteel grids, Glass
Shapes,
Metalbed, and Hand-Crochetedwool Sweater and
Scoubidouswoven
by Nicoletta Morozzi
Dimensions:
452 × 600 × 600 cm
Acquisition 2008
IZABEL MENDÈS DA CUNHA
Sans Titre, 1999
Céramique Polychrome
Dimensions: 85 x 35 x 30 cm
© Izabel Mendès da Cunha
JOAN MITCHELL
La Grande
Vallée VI, 1984
Oil on Canvas
Dimensions: 280×130
cm (×2) (diptych),
Collection of
the Fondation Cartier Pour l’art Contemporain
© Fondation Joan Mitchell
A figure from
the second generation of American abstract expressionism, Joan Michell first
traveled then immigrated to Paris in 1955, where she discovered the paintings
of Monet and the French Impressionists. In her work, she combined the
influences of these two movements and sought to convey the emotion aroused by
contact with nature. This major piece showcases this commitment to a “sentient”
abstraction, expressed through deep colors and free forms. The painting,
inspired by the artist’s childhood memories, evokes a remote marsh near Nantes,
lit by an agitated sky. The floral colors are interrupted by streaks of black,
indications of the artist’s distress at a time when she had recently lost a
loved one.
JEAN NOUVEL BIOGRAPHY
Jean Nouvel Architect,
born in Fumel (France) in 1945
After he enrolled at the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Bordeaux, Jean Nouvel entered the Ecole Nationale
Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris in 1966 and obtained his degree in 1971.
Assistant to the architect Claude Parent and inspired by urban planner and
essayist Paul Virilio, he started his first architecture practice in 1970. Soon
afterwards, he became a founding member of the French Architecture Union
and the “Mars 1976” Movement whose purpose was to oppose the
architects’corporatism.
His strong stances and somewhat
provocative opinions on contemporary architecture in the urban context,
together with his unfailing ability to inject originality into all the projects
he undertakes, have formed his international image. Jean Nouvel’s work does not
result from considerations of style or ideology, but from a quest to create a
unique concept for a singular combination of people, place, and time.
His contextual approach and ability to infuse a genuine uniqueness into
all the projects he undertakes have consistently yielded buildings that
transform their environments and indelibly mark the cities in which they are
built.
His works have gained
worldwide recognition through numerous prestigious French and International
prizes and rewards. In 1989, the Arab World Institute in Paris was awarded the
Aga-Khan Prize because of its role as “a successful bridge between French and
Arab cultures”. In 2000, Jean Nouvel received the Lion d’Or of the Venice
Biennale. In 2001, he received three of the highest international awards: the Royal
Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), the Praemium
Imperiale of Japan’s Fine Arts Association, and the Borromini Prize for the
Culture and Conference Center in Lucerne. He was appointed Docteur Honoris
Causa of the Royal College of Art in London in 2002. T he Agbar Tower in
Barcelona was awarded the International Highrise Award 2006 in Frankfurt, “as
it makes an outstanding contribution to the current debate on high-rises.” Jean
Nouvel was the recipient of the prestigious Pritzker Prize in 2008. In France,
he has received many awards, including the Gold Medal from the French Academy
of Architecture, two “Équerres d’Argent” and the title of Officer of the Legion
of Honor.
Among its main projects
and studies in progress are the Sharaan Desert Resort (AlUla), the Shenzhen
Opera, the Querola d’Ordino housing (Andorra), the Humanization and
Expansion Projects of the Palais du Peuple (Paris) and the William Booth
Residence (Marseille), the transformation of the Galeries Lafayette (Berlin),
the Aviation Academy (Singapore), the Not a Hotel residential project
(Yakushima) and the National Art Museum of China – NAMOC (Beijing)…
PRINCIPAL COMPLETED PROJECTS
Opera House (Lyon – 1993), Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain (Paris – 1994), Galeries Lafayette (Berlin – 1996), Culture and Congress Centre – KKL (Lucerne – 2000), Law court (Nantes - 2000), Dentsu Tower (Tokyo – 2002), Agbar Tower (Barcelona – 2005), Reina Sofia Museum extension (Madrid – 2005), musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac (Paris – 2006), Guthrie Theater (Minneapolis – 2006), Richemont Headquarters (Geneva – 2006), 40 Mercer housing building (New York – 2008), Concert Hall – DR (Denmarks Radio) (Copenhagen – 2009), Ferrari’s Factory (Maranello – 2009), One New Change (London – 2010), 100 11th avenue (New York – 2010), Sofitel Stephansdom (Vienna – 2010), City Hall (Montpellier – 2011), Doha High Rise Office Building (2011), Renaissance Barcelona Fira hotel (Barcelona – 2012), mixed use high-rise building One Central Park (Sydney – 2014), Imagine Institute (Paris – 2014), Anderson 18 & Nouvel Ardmore (Singapore – 2015), housing, office and retail tower The White Walls (Nicosia – 2015), Philharmonie de Paris (2015), Le Nouvel KLCC residential tower (Kuala Lumpur – 2016), Louvre Abu Dhabi (2017), Fondazione Alda Fendi (Rome – 2018), office tower La Marseillaise (Marseille – 2018), Stelios Ioannou Lerning Resource Center – University of Cyprus (Nicosia – 2018), Ycone residential tower (Lyon – 2019), National Museum of Qatar (Doha – 2019), 53W53 Tower integrating the extension of the MoMA galleries (New York – 2019), CEVA train stations (Geneva – 2019), Dolce&Gabbana Flagship Store (Seoul – 2021), Marc Ladreit de Lacharrière Gallery - Musée du quai Branly (Paris – 2021), offices and retails Henderson Cifi Tiandi – The Roof (Shanghai – 2021), Museum of Art Pudong – MAP (Shanghai – 2021), The Artists’ Garden, (Qingdao – 2021), the residential tower and hotel Rosewood (São Paulo – 2022), the office towers Duo and Hekla (Paris – 2022), Start Museum (Shanghai – 2022), facade and lobby of the pop-up Samsung Store 125 (Paris – 2024), Samsung Pavilion (Paris – 2024), UBS headquarters (Monaco – UBS), the Tencent Tower (Guangzhou, 2025).



































































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