Leonora Carrington: How a Woman Reinvented Surrealism After the War
Profound change If the world is undergoing profound change, it is not only in fields related to artificial intelligence or geopolitics. On a far more modest and, of course, less turbulent level, art history too is in the midst of major upheaval. Its impact should not be underestimated. This discipline shapes the way we read […]
TEFAF Maastricht and Its (Almost) Leonardo da Vinci
Viral image This image went around the world. In November 2017, Christie’s sold a remarkably rare painting by Leonardo da Vinci, a Salvator Mundi painted around 1500, for $450 million, making it the most expensive work ever sold at auction. The fact that this depiction of Christ by one of the most famous artists of […]
Forget the scandals: discover the Louvre’s new little gallery of wonders
Immense ambitions The Louvre once had immense ambitions. Then came the controversies — the resignation of its president, water leaks, strikes, and even a spectacular burglary — that buried the world’s largest museum under a mountain of problems. As early as 2000, the Pavillon des Sessions had been created at the initiative of Jacques Chirac. In […]
At the ARCO Fair in Madrid. The Time of Political Art
Mood of war When the mood is one of war, it is hardly one for buying art. The contemporary art fair Art Dubai was scheduled to take place from April 17 to 19, 2026, in the tourist hub of the United Arab Emirates. On March 2, just two days after the outbreak of the violent […]
Alejandro Jodorowsky: 1,072 Pages, 14 Kilograms of a Legend
Inner Strength It takes uncommon inner strength to turn a resounding failure into a model success. It takes a rare spiritual stamina to transform the story of a science-fiction film boasting the most extraordinary cast imaginable — Dalí, Orson Welles, music by Pink Floyd — yet destined never to be made, into an enduring legend […]
Tracey Emin: London Coronation of the Forever Young British Artist, Now a Major Painter
Christian aesthetic What strikes you almost immediately when visiting the retrospective devoted to Tracey Emin (born in 1963)—the major London event of the season, on view at the Tate Modern through August 31—is that her artistic vision seems, in certain respects, to follow a Christian aesthetic. Sexual life and martyrdom Such a statement would […]
Martin Parr: Behind the Smile. His Final exhibition is in Paris.
Invention of a genre On December 6, 2025, the English photographer Martin Parr died at the age of 73. It is fair to say — and this is rare in contemporary photography — that he invented a genre of his own, with his garish, satirical images of contemporary society.I interviewed him six years ago on […]
Louise Nevelson at the Centre Pompidou-Metz: The Return of a Monument of American Sculpture
All black Every color has its virtues. Black, when applied uniformly, unlike other hues, curiously gives relief to things. The great French figure of abstract painting, Pierre Soulages, understood this well when, at the end of his life, he created his “outrenoirs,” monochrome paintings worked through the depth of the material. Long before him, an […]
Magritte Sells Big. Magritte Is Bought at a Premium
Absurd and poetic The world is uncertain. The art market is unsettled. And yet, amid a pervasive sense of insecurity, one artist’s market performance stands out for its strength. Quietly but steadily, his prices continue to rise, reaching colossal sums. His success may lie in the fact that he expresses himself through images that deploy […]
Turner and Constable: The Delights of Landscape, Prefiguring a Revolution in Painting
In Mumbai, a grand voyage through time with Doug Aitken
Big effects The Californian Doug Aitken is what is usually described, somewhat vaguely, as a “multidisciplinary artist.” His mode of operation, however, is anything but vague. He deftly deploys every means at his disposal—not only painting or sculpture—to express himself. Aitken is something of an entrepreneur in art. He likes big effects. In that sense, […]















