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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.
This A3-format book brings together a selection of 50 exhibition posters presented at the Collection de l’Art Brut between 1976 and 2026 and designed by Werner Jeker, who also designed the book’s layout.
A reflection on the theme of light and shadow in contemporary art: the materiality of light and the shadowed realms of the unconscious transform our relationship with the visible and the invisible, creating a new visual language that transcends the centuries.
The Art of Antiquing in France. Sharon Santoni has spent decades exploring flea markets, brocantes, and antique fairs throughout France.
An iconic figure of Impressionism, Renoir (1841–1919) stands out as one of the great chroniclers of modern life, alongside Manet, Degas, Caillebotte and Monet.
Steffani Jemison is an artist and writer based in Brooklyn, New York. Her practice examines the relationships between body, memory, and history, and engages with U.S. culture, vernacular language, as well as the spheres of the private, the social, and the political, through various forms of narrative and temporality.
For over thirty years, artist Katharina Grosse (born in Germany in 1961, lives and works in Berlin and New Zealand) has been using spray paint to create immersive paintings. Inspired by Renaissance frescoes, she incorporates architecture into her art, leading to a three-dimensional shift in her approach.
The book addresses the artistic relationship between Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1734-1806) and Hubert Robert (1733-1808) by studying their respective perspectives on nature. Exhibition details
Alt Går Bra / Tout Va Bien is the name of the artist collective formed by Agnes Nedregård and Branko Boero Imwinkelried — a name that resonates above all as a maxim for contemporary art.
Ceija Stojka (1933–2013), an Austrian Romani woman, was deported at the age of 10 with her family to Auschwitz-Birkenau, Ravensbrück and Bergen-Belsen between 1943 and 1945. More than just a testimony, Ceija Stojka's work is now recognised worldwide for its artistic value and featured in the collections of major contemporary art museums. Exhibition details
Meriem Bennani explores communal living and the individual’s place within the community. In chorus, as soloists, in unison or responding to one another, these flip-flops evoke individuals in a moving crowd, at a demonstration, in a stadium or during a dakka marrakchia, a traditional Moroccan musical ceremony.
The Cluny Museum guide presents over two hundred works illustrating the different periods covered by the collections of this unique venue, which combines Gallo-Roman baths and a 15th-century mansion.
Much more than a Gallo-Roman museum, the Musée de la Romanité archaeological museum offers insight into the Romanisation of the region and its impact over the centuries. Awarded the Musée de France label, it is the largest museum in the Gard department and one of the most visited museums in Occitanie.
For 25 years, the Marcel Duchamp Prize has aimed to promote contemporary French artists or artists residing in France in the field of plastic and visual arts. Selected by a jury of collectors, the four nominated artists are invited to exhibit their new projects at the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris at the end of September.
The most comprehensive book to date on contemporary artist Friedrich Kunath
Roger Edgar Gillet (Paris, 1924 – Saint-Suliac, 2004) is an emblematic figure of French painting in the second half of the twentieth century, yet one largely unknown to the general public. Exhibition details
Celebrating 270 years of unrivaled dedication to luxury horology, this volume extols the enduring influence of Swiss watchmaking legend Vacheron Constantin.
Established in Morocco since 2009, the Montresso Art Foundation supports the creation and advancement of contemporary artistic research.
A comprehensive monograph dedicated to Fra Giovanni da Fiesole, known as Beato Angelico (c. 1395–1455), one of the founding fathers of Florentine Renaissance art.
The book explores architectural narratives in Togo since the end of the 19th century, with a focus on modern architecture. It was commissioned by the founding director of the Palais de Lomé, Sonia Lawson, for the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of the Venice Biennale.
An antique map published in poster format. With a map on the front and its history on the back, printed on high-quality paper. This nostalgic geography map comes in an elegant sleeve.
An antique map published in poster format. With a map on the front and its history on the back, printed on high-quality paper. This nostalgic geography map comes in an elegant sleeve.
An antique map published in poster format. With a map on the front and its history on the back, printed on high-quality paper. This nostalgic geography map comes in an elegant sleeve.
An absorbing study of Swiss artist Sophie Taeuber-Arp (1889-1943), looking in depth at the role of the curve in the artist's formal lexicon.
This book presents a new generation of architects and interior designers, invited to imagine the interiors of a changing world.
Bracha Lichtenberg Ettinger is a Franco-Israeli artist, writer, psychoanalyst and philosopher based in France.
In 2026, the works of the Comilog Foundation Collection - comprising masks, statuettes, talismanic objects, antique treasures and finely crafted torcs - took their place in the display cases of the Musée d'Art Moderne et Ancient in Libreville.
Guardians, Bisons, Keepers and Walking Men : the monumental sculptures of Xavier Mascaro (Paris, 1965) cross continents and eras.
Contemporary Pakistani-American artist Huma Bhabha shares Alberto Giacometti's belief that, since the earliest civilisations, ‘everything revolves around the human body’.
The Stations of the Cross designed by Matisse for the Chapel du Rosaire in Vence is an extraordinary work. Its deliberately rough style, as the artist himself admitted, contrasts not only with the rest of the chapel, which is bathed in light, but also with almost all of Matisse's other works.
Jacques Majorelle (1886–1962) is an iconic figure of Orientalism. The son of cabinetmaker Louis Majorelle, he trained at the École Nationale des Beaux-Arts Appliqués in Nancy and then in Paris at the Académie Julian.
The book explores the many facets of Slavko Kopač (1913–1995), a French-Croatian painter, sculptor and ceramist who maintained close ties with Surrealism, Informal Art and Art Brut.
Marie Darrieussecq, winner of the Medicis prize, has written a short story inspired by the work of Françoise Pétrovitch. In addition to nods to her iconography—birds, isolated landscapes and absent figures—the writer captures the melancholy and languor of the painter’s works in her own words.
Composed like a tale, this book brings together works by artists and writers whose work responds to the philosophical, artistic and existential questions raised by Vincent van Gogh in the correspondence he wrote during his stay in Provence (1888–1890).
The first monograph devoted to Roger Montané (1916–2002), a figurative painter who exhibited in Tokyo, New York and London in the 1960s but has been erased from art history. The book together texts by André Barrère, art critic and member of the committee of the Syndicat de la presse artistique française (French Art Press Union), and Corinne Laouès, PhD in...
The book presents a selection of masterpieces from the Pinault Collection, spanning from the mid-20th century to the present day.
Through more than a hundred works, the catalogue devoted to M.C. Escher traces the entire artistic career of the Dutch engraver (1898–1972), from his early training and travels in Italy to the complex technical experiments that made him an artist admired even in scientific circles.
More than a century of exchanges, encounters and relations between the cities of Aden and Marseille is traced through rare works and archival documents from the Louvre Museum, as well as other prestigious international collections. Exhibition details
For the past half-century, the work of French-Moroccan artist Najia Mehadji has followed a remarkable trajectory. Sensitive to the enduring survival of forms, her work stands as an unprecedented expression of neo-symbolism.
Jewellery design has long remained hidden from view and the public eye. Whether functional or bearers of unfulfilled dreams, these paper jewels have nevertheless, since the 15th century, been the shadow side of the models to which they have often given rise.
Bruno Sassarone reveals an abstract and radical Paris. Playing with the effects of light and shadow, his photographs offer a new vision that transforms the way we see the city.
In 1917, as World War I raged, two American women, Anne Morgan and Anne Murray Dike, set up the Civilian Section of the American Fund for French Wounded (AFFW) at the Château de Blérancourt in Picardy.
Dali's bestiary transgresses the laws of zoology, which he subjects to his delirious interpretation of reality. The monsters and chimeras conceived by the artist question humanity, its psyche, its relationship to sexuality, its unconscious and its phobias.
Jean Mus, Mediterranean landscape gardener, poet of plants and lover of nature, has designed more than 15.000 gardens around the world, from Provence to California.