Our webstore uses cookies to offer a better user experience and we consider that you are accepting their use if you keep browsing the website.

Ferdinand Georg Waldmüller (1793-1865) is Austria’s most important nineteenth-century artist. He painted portraits, still lifes, and landscapes with equal virtuosity, creating masterpieces in all of these genres.
The Musée d’Orsay in Paris houses the most extensive and arguably the most popular collection of Impressionist art in the world. This publication, bringing together more than 250 works (paintings, pastels, drawings, watercolours, sculptures and photographs), is the first to present the collection in all its variety.
The haute couture garments created by Maurizio Galante and the works of art and design conceived and developed with his partner Tal Lancman give shape to a remarkable world, filled with forms and textures that engage our senses and stir our emotions.
The book invites readers to explore the simplicity of clothing. Spanning more than two centuries of history, it looks back at moments when clothing has tended towards minimalism, functionality and naturalness.
A catalogue of exhibitions held at various heritage sites in Arles as part of the 57th edition of the Rencontres internationales de la photographie. The aim of the event is to promote the world’s photographic heritage and to showcase contemporary creativity.
For over thirty years, Djamel Tatah has been exploring the human condition through paintings and prints in which the repetition and transformation of figures serve as the driving force behind a reflection on solitude, memory and exile.
A graduate of the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Paris in 2009, Marine Wallon belongs to the renewal of contemporary painting, of which she is now one of the leading figures.
Romain Froquet, born in 1982, builds his body of work by blending abstract art, urban art and ethnic influences. He develops his artistic practice around flows, connections and movements, drawing curved lines. He is also a master of colour, introducing it into his works in a vibrant and striking manner.
The Belgian artist Edith Dekyndt (b. Ypres, Belgium, 1960; lives and works in Brussels) trains her attention on the forces quietly at work in our ever more rapidly changing world.
The book invites readers to discover David Hockney’s diverse forms of expression. Alongside his 90-metre-long frieze, inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry, ten new paintings – five portraits and five still lifes – trace the artist’s engagement with time, perspective and art history, and reflect his constant call to see with both eyes and to consider how...
Alexandre Lenoir is a French painter who graduated from the Beaux-Arts de Paris in 2017. He paints lush, mysterious landscapes on a grand scale, with monumental canvases that straddle the line between figuration and abstraction.
Written by the museum's curators, this album is an essential tribute to Marc Chagall (1887-1985), a painter who devoted his entire life to developing in painting a true poetic grammar of universal significance.
The Museum of Jewish Art and History is staging the first exhibition in France dedicated to the artist Noa Eshkol. The exhibition traces nearly half a century of her creative output, from the 1950s to the 2000s, showcasing both her Wall Carpets and her choreographic works through drawings, photographs and film footage.
As the most comprehensive publication on Marcel Duchamp to date, this lavishly illustrated volume spans six decades of his creative output, offering a sumptuous visual introduction for newcomers and serving as an indispensable resource for artists and scholars.
The catalogue brings together highlights of postwar British figurative painting, including works by Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, David Hockney and Paula Rego.
An intellectual and obsessive collector, the American Daniel Brush (1947–2022) was an unclassifiable artist, disconcerting yet fascinating. Originally a painter, it was whilst sculpting the gold wedding ring for his future wife, Olivia, that he discovered a passion that would sustain him throughout his life: jewellery and goldsmithing.
Throughout his artistic career, Wolfgang Tillmans (born in 1968 in Remscheid, Germany) has pushed the boundaries of the visible, capturing and revealing the fragile beauty of the physical world. By proposing new ways of creating images, he explores the profound transformation of the media and information formats of our time.
Jean Prouvé's first postwar temporary house designed for his own family, remarkable for its use of the axial portal frame pavilion.
The catalogue puts forward a simple yet radical idea: nature is not a backdrop, but an active presence that transforms the way we see and challenges painting. Exhibition details
The book "Art Brut in Switzerland" is being published to mark the anniversary exhibition celebrating 50 years of the Collection de l’Art Brut (Switzerland). It brings together a wide range of works from a diverse array of sources, drawn exclusively from the collections of the Lausanne museum, and created by Swiss artists or those who have worked in...
The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation's Environmental Photography Award was launched in 2021. The book (bilingual French-English version), includes all the shortlisted photographs, accompanied by explanatory texts or photographers’ testimonials.
Whilst Alberto Giacometti’s surrealist works are well known today, it is less widely known that he was also involved in creating decorative art objects – such as lamps, andirons and vases – for Jean-Michel Frank, the renowned Parisian interior designer.
From the Edo period to the Meiji era, Japan celebrated the performing arts: acrobats, monkey trainers and trained animals feature in the prints of Hokusai, Yoshiharu and Chikanobu.
A leading figure on the contemporary French design scene, Éric Schmitt has been developing a distinctive body of work for over thirty years, at the intersection of art, design and exceptional craftsmanship.
Reconciling violence and ingenuity, intimacy and theatricality, Thomas Schütte’s ongoing examination of the human figure spans drawing, painting and sculpture.
Five centuries of great European painting in the revised edition of the catalogue of the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisboa.
From prestigious collections of historical perfume bottles to museums dedicated to painting and textile arts, this book celebrates the richness of the Provençal art of living as embodied by Fragonard. Illustrated with exceptional imagery, this retrospective book is a vibrant tribute to the beauty and heritage of the House.
Animal Sketching was the first book published by Alexander Calder in New York in 1926, shortly before he left for France.
The first monograph on Emmy Bridgwater (1906-1999), Surrealism of Angst examines this extraordinary British Surrealist artist who has long been unjustly overlooked.
Alongside the group exhibition “Clair-obscur”, Laura Lamiel takes over the 24 display windows of the Passage de la Bourse de Commerce – Pinault Collection, curated by Alexandra Bordes. The title “ça fait un bruit d’ailes, de feuilles, de sable”, borrowed from Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, sets the sensory and poetic tone of this installation.
Upside-down bodies, contorted limbs, grimacing faces, exposed organs and orifices: these are all images which, between the late Middle Ages and the early modern period, were capable of – and still are capable of – unsettling viewers and provoking unease.
Charles Zublena, of Italian origin, made his mark on the history of French cabinetmaking and design through his innovative work and his commitment to sustainable design. His workshop in Paris, which opened in 1930, was the birthplace of his own designs, which are on display at the Musée Galliera.
Both rivals and comrades-in-arms, Matisse and Picasso engaged in one of the richest artistic dialogues of the century. After providing an overview of the aesthetic dialogue that began between the two artists as soon as they met, art historian Yve-Alain Bois focuses on their collaboration from the early 1930s onwards.
For the first time, Annette Messager’s work is examined through the lens of animality. Although animals have been a constant feature of her work since the 1970s, they have never before been the subject of such an in-depth exploration. Here, the animal world becomes a mirror of human passions and impulses: they resemble us, parody us, and reveal us.
Das Buch bietet eine Einführung in das Werk von Martin Schongauer (1450–1491), einem der berühmtesten deutschen Maler. Ein Standardwerk über eine der schönsten Darstellungen der Jungfrau Maria.
A fun and educational activity book to explore the work of Henri Matisse, with 100 reusable stickers.
A major exhibition dedicated to the work of Henry Taylor. A former psychiatric nurse, he produces expressive paintings centred on the Black community, ranging from hospital patients to popular icons.
This richly illustrated book sheds light on a previously unexplored chapter of Monet's life and career-before he began his signature water lily studies. The formative years spent discovering and capturing the beauty of Giverny, and his home there. Exhibition details
Originally from the Netherlands, Otto van Rees (1884-1957) and Adya van Rees-Dutilh (1876-1959) established themselves as major figures in the European avant-garde, engaged in an artistic quest without borders. Exhibition details
The Gof Time is the heart of the Louvre-Lens, a striking, light-filled space that reveals itself as you take in this concept, unique in the world: a long gallery stretching 120 metres, set on a gentle slope and filled with over 200 masterpieces. 6,000 years of art, history and humanity to explore at your leisure, at your own pace, freely.
This is the first book to present a comprehensive overview of Nan Goldin's work as a filmmaker. Accompanying the retrospective show and tour of the same name, organized by Moderna Museet, Stockholm, the book draws from the nearly dozen slideshows and films Goldin has made from thousands of photographs, film sequences, audio tapes and music tracks.
Seurat and the Sea is a scholarly and visually rich catalogue accompanying a landmark exhibition at The Courtauld, London, the first exhibition devoted to Seurat’s seascapes.
When the Royal Academy was founded in 1768, its members included two women, yet there would not be another female academician until Dame Laura Knight was elected in 1936. Despite this institutional exclusion, women artists inBritain continued to train, practice, and exhibit during this period, particularly in the field of landscape watercolours.
A vibrant art book reflecting the unique vision of a passionate philanthropist, collector, and entrepreneur. Garance Primat unveils a selection of works drawn from the heart of her aesthetic and spiritual journey.