25/05/14

Taipei Biennial 2014: Nicolas Bourriaud selected as curator

The Taipei Biennial 2014 will be held at Taipei Fine Arts Museum from 13th September 2014 through 4th January 2015.

The French art critic/curator Nicolas Bourriaud (born 1965) has been selected as the curator of the Taipei Biennial 2014. Titled “The Great Acceleration”, it will develop his curatorial concept for the biennial around the topic Art and Its New Ecosystem: A Global Set of Relations.

Nicolas Bourriaud is the Director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris (ENSBA) since 2012. Bourriaud is best known amongst his peers for his book Relational Aesthetics (1998) in which he attempted to reveal the new approaches to contemporary art in the 1990s by addressing an aesthetic of the inter-human, of encounters and of transforming social contexts.

In the Taipei Biennial 2014, curator Nicolas Bourriaud will expand on his theory of relational aesthetics, examining how contemporary art expresses this new contract among human beings, animals, plants, machines, products and objects. The exhibition will highlight the way artists focus on links, chainings, connections and mutations, and how they envision planet earth as a huge network, where new states of matter and new forms of relations appear, forming a new state of the “ghost dance” between people and objects that Karl Marx has described in the 19th century.

Today, the sphere of inter-human relations cannot be conceived apart from the factors of environment and technology. Similarly, how could art develop independently from them? This is why, since the beginning of the 21st century, contemporary artists have tended to explore the ties binding living beings with objects, the machine with the body, and the technological with the social – and to experience their interdependence – in order to renegotiate their relationships with both the technosphere and the biosphere.

In the West, some philosophers are critically re-evaluating the concept of such a new ecosystem, and are drawing from Chinese philosophy as a basic conceptual contrast to Western philosophy. For example, in the cosmology of Zhuangzi, time and space are infinite, without beginning or end. The free transitioning among object and object, object and person, without boundary or condition, he called the “Transformation of Things.” Graham Harman, meanwhile, considers everything as an “object”, whether physical, fictional, living or inert. In fact, this radical Western philosophical view of universal objectification distantly echoes Chinese thought.

Through such cultural and technological cross-pollenization, a possible global refoundation of aesthetics is taking shape at the present time. From this perspective, through the discipline and practice of contemporary art, the Taipei Biennial 2014 will attempt to examine art and its new ecosystem in a global set of relations.

Since 1998, the Taipei Biennial has launched its international programming in the city by inviting guest curators to contribute to an enriched environment, cross-cultural practices, and to showcase disciplines and new practices of art today. But the Taipei Biennial also endeavours to address social and historical issues concerning the city (Taipei) as a place, not merely a venue, by mixing artists and elements of the city.

In light of this, the Taipei Biennial 2014 has invited Nicolas Bourriaud as curator to organize the exhibition as a direct network of both the local community and the international community brought together by a common interest in addressing aesthetic issues in a new era.

In his recently publicized speech on the topic of “Art and Its New Ecosystem: A Global Set of Relations” on the 29th of December 2013 at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Bourriaud said, “Art theory and aesthetic concepts start from discussions with the artists and a dialogue with their work.” Bourriaud made a truly remarkable statement in conceptualizing the Taipei Biennial 2014. We can see that when curating an exhibition, Bourriaud shapes both ideas and artworks through open dialogue with the artists. 

Taipei Fine Arts Museum
No. 181 Zhongshan N. Road Sec. 3, Taipei 10461, Taiwan

22/05/14

Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris @ The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
June 15 - September 14, 2014

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, will present Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris, the first major exhibition in the United States devoted to the 19th-century French artist Charles Marville. The exhibition explores the beauty, variety and historical poignancy of his art through nearly 100 photographs that span his entire career. At the heart of the show are compelling views of Paris both before and after many of its historic neighborhoods were razed to make way for broad boulevards, monumental buildings and manicured parks. The accompanying publication is the first scholarly catalogue about Charles Marville and presents recently discovered, groundbreaking scholarship on his art and life.

“This show allows us to see Paris through the eyes of one of photography’s early masters, to witness the ‘City of Light’ taking shape—and of course we feel pangs of nostalgia for what would soon be lost,” said Gary Tinterow, Museum director. “This groundbreaking exhibition was met with praise at the National Gallery in D.C. and is highly anticipated in New York. We’re excited and honored to bring these photographic treasures to Houston this summer.”  

The presentation in Houston is organized by Malcolm Daniel, recently appointed Curator in Charge of the Department of Photography. “Marville’s work has long been admired by photography aficionados,” remarked Daniel, “but this exhibition affords the broad public its first chance to see the full extent of this artist’s work through prints carefully selected for their perfectly calibrated compositions, exquisite technique and exceptional state of preservation. Most appealingly, many of Charles Marville’s photographs show Paris at the very moment of its transformation from a city of narrow streets and medieval buildings into the most modern of European capitals.”

Recent Discoveries
Charles Marville has long remained a mystery partly because documents that would shed light on his biography were thought to have disappeared in a fire that consumed Paris’s city hall in 1871. The whereabouts of other documentation was simply unknown. However, new research has helped National Gallery of Art curator Sarah Kennel and exhibition researcher Daniel Catan reconstruct Charles Marville’s personal and professional biography.

The son of a tailor and laundress, Charles-François Bossu was born in Paris in 1813. In a double act of self-invention, he jettisoned his given name (bossu means hunchback in French), assuming the name Marville around 1832, and became an artist. He embarked on a career as an illustrator in the early 1830s but turned to the young discipline of photography in 1850. Although he continued to be known as Marville until his death in 1879, he never formally changed his name, which is the reason many of the legal documents pertaining to his life have gone unnoticed for decades. The exhibition catalogue establishes Marville’s biography, including his parentage and his relationship with a lifelong companion, and uncovers many significant details that illuminate the evolution and circumstances of his career.

The Exhibition and Artist’s Background
Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris reveals an artist of broader talent than previously recognized, beginning with a compelling series of intimate self-portraits and portraits of friends and colleagues that provide a fascinating glimpse into Charles Marville’s personal life and professional ties. Featured works from his early career, beginning in 1850, also include landscapes, cityscapes, studies of sculpture and striking architectural photographs made in Paris, across France and in Germany along the Rhine. In Houston, the selection of early works will include a charmingly picturesque view of the half-timbered home of Francois I in Abbeville and a graphically powerful image of Ehrenbreitstein Fortress, both from the Museum’s Manfred Heiting Collection.  

Among the most poetic works in the exhibition are a series of cloud studies that Charles Marville made in the mid-1850s from the rooftop of his Paris studio. Using collodion-on-glass negatives, a more rapid and sensitive process than the paper negatives he had earlier used, the artist captured delicate, luminous cloud formations on the city’s horizon.

Charles Marville’s first patronage from the City of Paris came in 1858, a commission to photograph the newly refurbished Bois de Boulogne, a royal park on the edge of Paris that had been transformed under the emperor Napoleon III into a site of bourgeois leisure and pleasure. The park’s highly orchestrated mix of natural and man-made is seen in The Emperor’s Kiosk and other views. Arguably his first important body of work conceived and executed as a systematic series, the Bois de Boulogne is represented in the exhibition by nine large prints and two albums on loan from France’s Bibliothèque Nationale (National Library).

At the heart of the exhibition are the images for which Charles Marville has been most celebrated: rigorously composed, beautifully detailed prints that he made beginning in the early 1860s as “official photographer” for the City of Paris.  Known as the Old Paris album, the 425 photographs that Charles Marville made for Paris’s agency of historic works (under the aegis of urban planner Georges-Eugène Baron Haussmann) document the narrow streets and crumbling buildings of the pre-modern Paris and, in many cases, serve as the only visual record of sites that have long since vanished. Often working just one step ahead of the wrecking ball, Charles Marville recorded not only buildings slated for destruction, but also a disappearing way of life as age-old working-class neighborhoods were replaced with broad boulevards and new apartment buildings for a new rising middle class. In a view of the Passage Saint-Benoît, for instance, an attentive viewer finds an intriguing display of mismatched glassware in a café window, a charming hand-painted sign literally pointing to a seller of wood and charcoal, the decorative over-door panel of an already vacated wine store and other time-worn details of life in Paris. Other pictures include glistening cobblestones, the traces of torn-down buildings left on neighboring walls and advertising for such new-fangled items as a folding umbrella and photography itself.

The exhibition concludes with an exploration of the emergence of modern Paris through Charles Marville’s photographs. Even before completing the Old Paris series, Charles Marville began to photograph the city that was coming into being, from massive construction projects, renovated churches and broad boulevards to a host of modern conveniences, such as the elegant new gas lamps and the poetically named vespasiennes (public urinals) that cemented Paris’s reputation in the 1860s as the most modern city in the world. Charles Marville also explored the city’s edges, where desolate stretches of half-finished construction suggest the physical displacements and psychic costs of modernization. Sharp-edged, beautifully detailed and brilliantly composed, Charles Marville’s photographs present the French capital as at once glamorous and alienating.  

By the time of his death, Charles Marville had fallen into relative obscurity, with much of his work stored in municipal or state archives. This exhibition, which marks the bicentennial of Charles Marville’s birth, explores the full trajectory of the artist’s photographic career and brings to light the extraordinary beauty and historical significance of his art.

This exhibition is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

More than a third of the works presented in the exhibition are on loan from the Musée Carnavalet, Paris, the city’s history museum. Conservation and preparation of the loans from the Musée Carnavalet has been undertaken by the Atelier de Restauration et de Conservation des Photographies de la Ville de Paris (ARCP).

Curators and Catalogue
Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris is organized by the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., in association with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

Sarah Kennel, associate curator of photographs, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., is the curator of the exhibition. At the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Malcolm Daniel, curator in charge of the department of photography, will be the coordinating curator of the exhibition.

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue written by Sarah Kennel; Peter Barberie, Philadelphia Museum of Art; Anne de Mondenard, Center for Research and Restorations of the Museums of France; Françoise Reynaud, Musée Carnavalet; and Joke de Wolf, University of Groningen.

THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON
1001 Bissonnet Houston, Texas 77005

20/05/14

Nuit européenne des musées 2014 : Bilan

La 10ème édition de la Nuit européenne des musées a rassemblé, samedi 17 mai 2014, plus de 2 millions de visiteurs en France, soit deux fois plus que lors de la première édition en 2005

Affiche de la Nuit européenne des musées 2014
Graphisme : DES SIGNES, le studio Muchir et Desclouds

Dans un communiqué de presse, le ministère de la culture et de la communication dresse un bilan positif de la Nuit des musées 2014. Ce sont en effet plus de 2 millions de visiteurs ont profité de la soirée du samedi 17 mai 2014 pour satisfaire leur curiosité. 1300 musées en France ont ouvert gratuitement leurs portes. Voici quelques chiffres : 

En Ile-de-France :
Le Centre Pompidou : 25 585 visiteurs
Le Palais de Tokyo : 4 000 visiteurs
Le Grand Palais : 16 704 visiteurs
Le Petit Palais : 2 596 visiteurs
Le musée du Quai Branly : 15 572 visiteurs
Le musée national des arts asiatiques, Guimet : 2 028 visiteurs
Le musée national du Moyen-Age, Cluny : 1 812 visiteurs
Le musée d’Orsay : 11 841 visiteurs
Le musée de la chasse et de la nature : 2 740 visiteurs
Le musée Zadkine : 840 visiteurs
Palais Galliera : 1 798 visiteurs
Le musée des arts et métiers : 4 024 visiteurs
Le musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris : 4 950 visiteurs
Cité de la Musique : 1 400 visiteurs
Le Mac/Val : 1 568 visiteurs
Le Château de Versailles : 4 600 visiteurs
Le Château de Fontainebleau : 3 477 visiteurs
Le musée du Château de la Malmaison et Bois Préau : 483 visiteurs
Palais impérial de Compiègne : 2 260 visiteurs

En région :
La Nuit des mystères à Mulhouse : 30 000 visiteurs
Les musées de Strasbourg : 19 912 visiteurs
Le musée lorrain de Nancy : 3 058 visiteurs
Le Centre Pompidou Metz : 3 106 visiteurs
Le LAM de Villeneuve d’Ascq : 2 450 visiteurs
Le musée des Beaux-Arts de Lille : 5 900 visiteurs
Le Louvre-Lens : 3 644 visiteurs
L’ensemble des musées de La Rochelle : 4 000 visiteurs
L’ensemble des musées d’Angers : 6 839 visiteurs
Les musées de Bordeaux : 35 320 visiteurs
Le musée de Grenoble : 2 052 visiteurs
Vesunna, le musée Gallo-Romain de Périgueux : 1 110 visiteurs
Le Centre national du costume de scène à Moulins : 1 980 visiteurs
Le musée des Augustins à Toulouse : 4 239 visiteurs
Le musée Fabre de Montpellier : 3 000 visiteurs
Le musée du Petit Palais d’Avignon : 1 873 visiteurs
Le MUCEM Marseille : 4 814 visiteurs
Le musée d’art moderne et contemporain de Nice : 1 036 visiteurs

En Europe :
Plus de 2 000 musées ont participé cette année à cette grande fête des musées.
Quelques exemples :
En Roumanie : 167 000 visiteurs
Barcelone en Espagne : 160 000 visiteurs
Sofia en Bulgarie : 150 000 visiteurs.
Au Royaume-Uni, le Museums at Night weekend s'est déroulé du jeudi 15 au samedi 17 mai, et a donné lieu à plus de 600 événements.

19/05/14

Durst Rho 312R roll to roll printer

The new Durst Rho 312R roll to roll printer 
With unrivalled production speeds and Variodrop technology

Durst Rho 312R roll to roll printer 
Photo (c) Durst

The Rho 312R is the most productive 3.2 m roll to roll printer in its class. It also offers a new quality standard for industrial backlit or “fine art printing”. The Rho 312R features Durst’s Quadro Array 12M printheads with Variodrop technology and the12 picolitre drop size enables excellent image quality with up to 900 dpi, whilst the Variodrop technology is responsible for the printer’s high productivity. It is capable of printing up to 240 sqm/hour in high speed mode and up to 122 sqm/h in POP mode. Productivity is further enhanced by the option of being able to print two 1.6 m rolls of media at the same time with individual print queues.
  
With print system of over 24,000 nozzles, there is no compromise between productivity and speed, whilst the high pigmentation reduces ink consumption and therefore provides a low cost per m² and a very competitive ROI. The Variodrop technology enhances the greyscale technology by increasing productivity and improved image quality, also eliminating the inherent problems that can occur with greyscale printing.
  
Other features include 6 colour printing and different ink options, unattended printing with large rolls, options of reverse side printing and integrated border cutting. Durst roll ink is environmentally friendly.
The inks are completely VOC free and accredited with the stringent Nordic Swan environmental certification.
  
For digital or offset printers who wish to enter new large format markets or enhance their existing portfolio, the Rho 312R is the most flexible and productive printer available. It will provide the ideal solution for anything from high quality backlits and “fine art” prints to POP, banners, and even wallpaper and façade decoration, profitably.  
  
The Rho 312R is the most productive 3.2 m roll to roll printer in its class. It also offers a new quality standard for industrial backlit or “fine art printing”. The Rho 312R features Durst’s Quadro Array 12M printheads with Variodrop technology and the12 picolitre drop size enables excellent image quality with up to 900 dpi, whilst the Variodrop technology is responsible for the printer’s high productivity. It is capable of printing up to 240 sqm/hour in high speed mode and up to 122 sqm/h in POP mode. Productivity is further enhanced by the option of being able to print two 1.6 m rolls of media at the same time with individual print queues.
  
With print system of over 24,000 nozzles, there is no compromise between productivity and speed, whilst the high pigmentation reduces ink consumption and therefore provides a low cost per m² and a very competitive ROI. The Variodrop technology enhances the greyscale technology by increasing productivity and improved image quality, also eliminating the inherent problems that can occur with greyscale printing.
  
Other features include 6 colour printing and different ink options, unattended printing with large rolls, options of reverse side printing and integrated border cutting. Durst roll ink is environmentally friendly.
The inks are completely VOC free and accredited with the stringent Nordic Swan environmental certification.
  
For digital or offset printers who wish to enter new large format markets or enhance their existing portfolio, the Rho 312R is the most flexible and productive printer available. It will provide the ideal solution for anything from high quality backlits and “fine art” prints to POP, banners, and even wallpaper and façade decoration, profitably. 

Durst Rho P10 200/250 HS

The new Durst Rho P10 HS Series
Double the productivity

Durst Rho P10 250 HS
Photo (c) Durst
 
The Rho P10 200/250 HS feature Durst’s Quadro Array 10M printheads with double the number nozzles in comparison to the Rho P10 200/250. They also have LED Pin curing in combination with conventional UV drying. The Pin curing helps to make the faster speed possible by sealing the drops of inks, keeping the quality perfect, whilst the UV curing finalises the drying process.
  
The Rho P10 Series set a new quality standard for industrial level inkjet printing when it was launched two years ago. That same quality, with a resolution of up to 1000 dpi, is now available from a printer that is capable of printing up to 400 sqm.
  
As with all the latest Durst Inkjet printers, the new Rho P10 HS Series are the most productive printers in their class. A true hybrid, they will print on both rigid and roll media equally fast and the media change from one to the other is both quick and simple. They also provide unrivalled versatility thanks to their ability to print on the widest range of media including foam board, metal, acrylics and PVC and roll media such as clear film and other backlit material, textiles and vinyls.
   
The stunning “fine art” print quality of both the existing and new P10 printers provides a level of quality that will allow for close up viewing of a wide range of advertising and corporate promotional material. The very fine tones and the option of additional light colours (light cyan and light magenta) offer perfect colour reproduction. Typically, they are ideal for indoor and outdoor signage, POP material, small to medium sized packaging and backlit luxury goods.  

The new Rho P10 HS can also boast Durst’s Variodrop technology. Not only does this help with the increased productivity but also provides improved image quality, particularly at the highest production speeds.
Solid areas of colour are smoother whilst offering bright vibrant colours.  

09/05/14

Simon Hantai Retrospective @ Ludwig Museum, Budapest

Hantai
Ludwig Museum, Budapest
May 9 – August 31, 2014 

The Ludwig Museum - Museum of Contemporary Art presents the first major exhibition of Simon Hantai in Hungary. The large-scale retrospective surveys the key aspects and periods within the oeuvre of the internationally renowned artist of Hungarian origin, from his early paintings executed in Hungary, through to his final works.

In 2013 the Centre Pompidou showcased a highly successful exhibition of Simon Hantai´s works. The Ludwig Museum is privileged to organize Simon Hantai´s solo exhibition in collaboration with the artist´s family as co-curators. Further enhancing the significance and distinctiveness of the retrospective, the sixty works on view include a number of previously unknown pieces. In addition to the artist´s bequest housed outside Hungary, the show also focuses on paintings belonging to Hungarian collections, thus providing a significant source for art connoisseurs and supplementing the previous international exhibitions.

Simon Hantaï was born in 1922 in Biatorbágy, Hungary, in the vicinity of Budapest. He studied at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in Budapest, under the direction of Vilmos Aba-Novák, Béla Kontuly and István Szőnyi. In 1948, Simon Hantai won a scholarship in Paris which was withdrawn as a result of the political changes. Before that the young painter immigrated to France with his wife Zsuzsa Biró, a fellow painter, they spent couple of month in Rome. Italian travel experiences influenced his artistic vision. When he met André Breton and his circle in Paris, he was painting vivid colourful canvases inhabited with phantasmagorical creatures, organic and biomorphic forms, as well as engaging in experiments concerning his medium and technique. Breton organised his first solo exhibition in Paris in 1953, praising Hantai´s work as a great departure in its accompanying catalogue. In the wake of his continuous experiments conducted in parallel with his Surrealist paintings, his art practice became increasingly gestural: following the Paris presentation of the New York School, he became inspired by abstract expressionism, and it was above all Pollock´s work that motivated him to turn to gesture painting. In the 1960s, he began to develop his own unique technique of image-making (the so-called pliage): by creasing and folding the canvas, and then covering it with layers of paint, he created specific abstract patterns on huge surfaces, drawing on the results of the Pollockian sense of freedom in painting, as well as on the explorations of light, colour and surface accomplished by French artists. His works created by the method of folding became arranged in consecutive series, or sequences of form (Mariales or The Virgin´s Mantles, Catamurons, Panses or Sausages, Meuns, Études, Blancs or Whites, and Tabulas).

In 1982, Simon Hantai represented France at the Venice Biennale; and at that time, he decided to withdraw from public life. His absence from the public art scene, however, did not imply abandoning art: Hantai never stopped painting and constantly revisiting his work. He died in September 2008 in his Paris home.

Signaling the importance of his oeuvre, Simon Hantai´s works are included not only in major Hungarian public collections, such as the Museum of Fine Arts, the Hungarian National Gallery and the Ludwig Museum, all in Budapest, and the Janus Pannonius Museum in Pécs, but also in world-famous international collections, such as the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Musée National d´Art Moderne, Centre Pompidou, and Musée d´Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Vatican Museum in Rome, the Musée d´Art Contemporain in Nice, Christie´s in London, and Galerie Jean Fournier in Paris, as well as in Hungarian, American, Italian, Belgian and French private collections.

The exhibition is organized by the Ludwig Museum – Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest in collaboration with the Archives Simon Hantai.

LUDWIG MUSEUM
H-1095 Budapest, Komor Marcell utca 1

08/05/14

Musée Carnavalet : Paris libéré, Paris photographié, Paris exposé

Paris libéré, Paris photographié, Paris exposé 
Musée Carnavalet, Paris 
11 juin 2014 - 8 février 2015

A l’occasion du 70e anniversaire de la libération de Paris et dans le cadre du Mois de la Photographie, le musée Carnavalet présente l’exposition Paris libéré, Paris photographié, Paris exposé

Affiche de l’exposition de 1944 
© Musée Carnavalet 

Le 25 août 1944, Paris est libéré par la 2e Division blindée du général Leclerc et les Alliés. Deux mois et demi après, alors que la France et les Alliés se battent encore contre les nazis, le musée Carnavalet écrit déjà l’histoire en ouvrant le 11 novembre 1944 une exposition sur la Libération. En effet, dès septembre, François Boucher, conservateur du musée Carnavalet et résistant, souhaite « réunir les documents indispensables à l’historien de l’avenir ». Il lance alors un appel dans la presse afin de « constituer une documentation très complète sur les journées de la libération de Paris » et sollicite de nombreuses institutions. Cette exposition, réalisée sur le vif et portée davantage sur l’émotion que sur la véracité historique, rencontre alors un véritable succès populaire. 

Paris libéré, Paris photographié, Paris exposé revient sur l’exposition de 1944 en reprenant des photographies de Robert Doisneau, René Zuber, Jean Séeberger… que viennent enrichir et contextualiser des tirages, des films d’époque, des entretiens vidéos avec des témoins de la Libération, des livres publiés à chaud ou encore divers objets attestant de l’engagement des résistants parisiens pour leur cause… Cet ensemble inédit de témoignages variés permet de comprendre la fabrique de l’image en temps de guerre. Dans un face à face où photographies et films se répondent, le parcours montre que les mémoires individuelles et collectives se sont construites grâce aux images qui, avec le temps, font l’objet d’interprétations variées. Une installation audio-visuelle de l’artiste Stéphane Thidet illustre le lien complexe qui nous lie aux photographies et le médecin généticien Axel Kahn nous explique comment notre cerveau les mémorise. 

Le musée Carnavalet propose un programme d’animations pendant toute la durée de l’exposition, disponible sur le site du musée www.carnavalet.paris.fr à partir du 1er juin. 

Par ailleurs le Département des expositions de la Direction de l’Information et de la Communication, et le musée du général Leclerc de Hauteclocque et de la Libération de Paris – musée Jean Moulin, présentent l’exposition Libérer Paris, août 1944, de juin à septembre 2014 salle Saint-Jean à l’Hôtel de ville. Hors les murs, des promenades parisiennes invitent à poursuivre la découverte de l’histoire de l’Insurrection et de la libération de Paris dans la ville. 

Commissariat de l'exposition : Catherine Tambrun, musée Carnavalet – Histoire de Paris 
Assistée de Cyril Colin 
Conseillère scientifique : Christine Lévisse-Touzé

Un catalogue de 400 pages environ / 270 illustrations environ est édité en français, anglais et allemand.

Musée Carnavalet – Histoire de Paris 
16, rue des Francs-Bourgeois - 75003 Paris
www.carnavalet.paris.fr