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This exhibition explores a time of unprecedented artistic contact and creative effervescence in France, which many people know little about. It is the first major exhibition devoted to a turning point in French history, in the reigns of Charles VIII (1483-1498) and Louis XII (1498-1515).
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Les Galeries nationales du Grand Palais
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ARC is delighted to be presenting the first French retrospective of photographer and filmmaker Larry Clark, born in 1943 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Organised in close collaboration with Clark himself, the exhibition sums up a fifty-year oeuvre with over two hundred original prints, most shown here for the first time.
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Musée d’Art Moderne de la ville de Paris
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The exhibition gave the public the unique opportunity to explore Mario Ceroli’s artistic universe. The artist, who like a new homo faber, transposes his desire to return to his origins into the manual creation of a form out of shadows and shapes.
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Tornabuoni Art
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Pat Steir’s great art lies in the delicate interaction between the forces of gravity and the properties inherent in paint. The precarious equilibrium of the fragile oscillations depends on the quantity, consistency and substance of paint, thus determining its flow and plasticity.
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Jeanne Bucher Jaeger | Paris, Marais Gallery
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A both infinite and self-enclosed territory (double illusion), “the desert” crystallizes a broad network of disciplines and references, from geography to literature, philosophy to biology, cartography to ecology.
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Bétonsalon - Centre d'art et de recherche
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Paola Salerno’s films and photographs examine men’s relation to their territory. They are the traces of a social and family history, close to documentary in form but imbued with subjectivity. Salerno’s relation to individuals and places profoundly influences the way she takes her photographs.
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On Translation is a project on the experience and interpretation of fear and its complexities on either side of the Strait. An attempt to perceive and understand hope in a continent “forgotten” by the Western world; Africa as a hope for the future.
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Gabrielle Maubrie Gallery
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The exhibition is a roundtrip between the surface of things and the center of the earth. Its logic résides, as often in this artist’s work, in its paradoxes. The + and – signs, and above all what they mean, are also antipodes to one another. In spoken English, More or less signifies some kind of equivalence. More or less, we don’t know.
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Claudine Papillon Gallery
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