a day ago
Wolfgang Tillmans' photography in action
"They have arrived," wrote visual artist Wolfgang Tillmans in French on his Instagram account on May 16, captioning a photograph showing trucks in front of the Centre Pompidou in Paris. It was a curious ballet: Since mid-March, the National Museum of Modern Art has been emptying its permanent collection, dispersing it among various institutions and storage sites during a major renovation of the building that is set to last five years. Yet here were new works arriving, all by the 56-year-old German contemporary artist, who had been invited by the institution to create the Centre Pompidou's final exhibition before the renovations began.
From June 13 to September 22, within the 6,000 square meters of the Public Information Library (Bpi), visitors can immerse themselves in Tillmans' work. Spanning more than three decades, this ever-evolving body of work brims with avenues for reflection and is marked by a strong political commitment (pro-LGBT, pro-European, pro-reception of refugees), while at the crossroads of various photographic genres (landscape, portrait, abstraction, documentary).