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Jeu de Paume 1
History Exhibition
Jeu de Paume 2
Jeu de Paume 3
Jeu de Paume 4
Jeu de Paume 5

Jeu de Paume

1st Arr.

Step inside a former 1861 tennis court that became a Nazi art storage vault during WWII, now reborn as Paris's premier photography temple. Rotating exhibitions span from Magnum masters to emerging image-makers, while the basement cinema screens art-house gems and the Tuileries-side terrace invites post-show contemplation.

Rotating photography exhibitions
Art house cinema
Historic 1861 building
Tuileries Garden location

Tips

📸"Martin Parr holds up a mirror to us with pop colors and an acidic reflection" (Time Out)
🎬check the basement cinema for art-house screenings
📚browse the excellent photography bookshop

Jeu de Paume

1 Pl. de la Concorde, 75001 Paris, France

Free

Upcoming at Jeu de Paume

Tuesday, May 26
Polynesia 66, carnet de constellations de Véronique Caye

Polynesia 66, carnet de constellations de Véronique Caye

May 26

Véronique Caye turns her family's scars into an atomic cartography. This haunting online exhibition traces her father's 1966 posting to French Polynesia alongside France's Pacific nuclear tests, weaving photographs, documents, and personal testimony into a meditation on how history marks bodies across generations.

Wednesday, May 27
Les cours du Jeu de Paume 2024-2025 - Cycle #5

Les cours du Jeu de Paume 2024-2025 - Cycle #5

May 27

Fashion photography gets a critical makeover in this four-part lecture series. Art historian Sébastien Quéquet unpacks how couturiers, photographers, and models have used the medium to challenge magazine-ready body ideals through legal, political, and social lenses.

Cycle #5: Visibles, invisibles. Pour une autre photographie de mode et ses modèles

Cycle #5: Visibles, invisibles. Pour une autre photographie de mode et ses modèles

May 27

Challenge glossy magazine ideals at this lecture series exploring how fashion photography reveals surprising judicial, political, and social stories. Led by art historian Sébastien Quéquet, four sessions trace alternative body representations beyond the advertising gaze.