
Exhibitions starting in September 2025
Posted in OUR CULTURAL NEWS
Le
SOULAGES at Musée du Luxembourg
Until January 11th 2026
"Thanks to exceptional lendings from the Soulages Museum, the exhibition brings together 130 works created between the 1940s and the early 2000s, including 25 previously unseen works. You will discover a collection of paintings on paper, long preserved in the artist's studio, which bear witness to the consistency and freedom with which Soulages approached this medium."
GEORGES DE LA TOUR at Musée Jacquemart André
Until January 25th 2026
“Bringing together rarely exhibited masterpieces, this retrospective dedicated to Georges de La Tour is a unique opportunity to discover the talent of an artist with an iconography that is both mysterious and fascinating…”
JOHN SINGER SERGENT at Musée d’Orsay
From Sept. 23rd 2025 until January 11th 2026
“John Singer Sargent (Florence, 1856 – London, 1925) is, with James McNeill Whistler, the most famous American artist of his generation and undoubtedly one of the greatest painters of the 19th and early 20th centuries […]. Designed in partnership with the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the exhibition “Sargent. Eblouir Paris” aims to introduce this painter to a wide audience. The exhibition brings together more than 90 works by John Singer Sargent, some of which have never been shown in France.”
Paul Troubetskoy at Musée d’Orsay
From September 30th 2025 to January 11th 2026
"The exhibition relates the career of this artist, born in Italy and adopted by Paris, who also pursued a brilliant career in the United States. Driven by his great talent as a portraitist, he was sought after by a cosmopolitan elite, celebrities, all of Paris, and even the first stars of American cinema [...] Beyond the portraits that made his reputation, the exhibition also highlights his animal sculpture, as well as his work related to the animal cause, of which he was, before his time, a fervent defender."
Amazônia at Musée du Quai Branly
From September 30th 2025 until January 18th 2026
“By bringing the museum’s collections into dialogue with contemporary works by indigenous artists, the exhibition invites us to rethink the boundaries between traditional and contemporary art, as defined by Western art history. “Artifacts” can be considered as works of art in their own right, while intangible heritage and ephemeral arts—dances, oral arts, body paintings, knowledge—testify to the richness and vitality of Amazonian cultures.”