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  • Hilma af Klint, Leonora Carrington & May's Museum Surge | May 2026
    2026/05/05
    (00:00:00) Hilma af Klint, Leonora Carrington & May's Museum Surge | May 2026
    (00:00:53) Leonora Carrington at Musée du Luxembourg
    (00:01:41) May's Broader Cultural Surge
    (00:02:36) Terrace Season and the Food Angle
    (00:03:11) What to Watch This Month

    Paris's cultural calendar hits a rare density in May 2026, and this episode maps the exhibitions worth your time — and the order worth doing them in.

    The headline is a double retrospective that feels deliberate. Hilma af Klint, the Swedish painter producing abstract work before Kandinsky claimed the territory, opens her first French retrospective at the Grand Palais on May 6th, running through August 30th. Across the sixth arrondissement, Musée du Luxembourg presents the first complete French retrospective of Leonora Carrington — Surrealist, singular, and long overdue — through July 19th. Both shows are serious institutional statements. If you're choosing one for a quieter afternoon, the Luxembourg is the insider call.

    Beyond those two: Musée de l'Orangerie's Henri Rousseau retrospective goes well beyond the jungle paintings (through July 20th); La Monnaie de Paris connects money and comics across 250 works (through September 6th); and Musée Guimet opens a genuinely rare show on May 20th — Korean national treasures from the Silla Kingdom, leaving Korea for the first time.

    On the food side, Fouquet's Paris has launched a spring menu on what they call a secret terrace — worth investigating, not yet confirmed for walk-in access.

    Practical note: May's public holidays mean more visitors with free days. Tuesdays through Thursdays, morning entry, are your clearest windows. The Carrington and Silla Guimet shows are the least obvious picks — which usually means the least contested doors.

    A YesWee production, built using AI technology.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 分
  • Fashion History Across Four Museums: Galliera, Guimet & Alaïa | Spring 2026
    2026/05/04
    (00:00:00) Fashion History Across Four Museums: Galliera, Guimet & Alaïa | Spring 2026
    (00:00:43) Musée des Arts Décoratifs Immersion
    (00:01:14) Alaïa and Dior at Marais Foundation
    (00:01:42) K-Beauty at Musée Guimet
    (00:02:25) Pont des Arts Restoration Warning
    (00:02:45) Today's Must-Do Recommendation

    Paris is doing something unusual right now: four major fashion exhibitions are open simultaneously, and they're in quiet conversation with each other. This episode maps the cluster and tells you what each one is actually arguing — not just what's on the walls.

    At Palais Galliera in the sixteenth arrondissement, 'Revealing the Feminine' frames eighteenth-century dress as social language — analytical, rigorous, worth more than a quick walk-through. A few kilometres east, Musée des Arts Décoratifs covers the same century but in a different register: fashion history as atmosphere rather than argument, making it the more accessible entry point of the two. In the Marais, Fondation Azzedine Alaïa puts Alaïa and Christian Dior in direct curatorial conversation — a pairing that shifts the show from retrospective to argument, which is rarer and more interesting than a timeline.

    The signal addition is at Musée Guimet: the K-Beauty exhibition tracks Korean aesthetics as a global phenomenon, positioning it not as trend but as embedded influence. It's the most ambitious claim of the four, and worth testing against what the rooms actually show.

    The episode's must-do recommendation is a double session at Galliera and Arts Décoratifs — close enough to combine in one afternoon, together covering the full institutional conversation about eighteenth-century dress this spring. Guimet is the counter-programme worth adding on a second visit.

    Practical note: the Pont des Arts restoration begins May 11. Pedestrian access during work isn't fully confirmed — move that crossing to before the eleventh if it's in your plans.

    This podcast was built using AI technology. A YesWee production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    4 分
  • Free Museum Sunday: Louvre, Concorde & Vintage Cars | May 3
    2026/05/03
    (00:00:00) Free Museum Sunday: Louvre, Concorde & Vintage Cars | May 3
    (00:00:29) Louvre New Exhibitions Open
    (00:01:03) Free Museum Sunday Across Paris
    (00:01:31) Yann Arthus-Bertrand at Concorde
    (00:01:55) Vintage Cars and Luminiscence Finale
    (00:02:35) Closing Takeaway: Early May Is the Window

    Today is the first Sunday of May, which triggers one of Paris's best-kept structural advantages: free entry to national museums, castles, and monuments across the city and the Île-de-France region. The Louvre has new programming running on Hellenistic sculpture and Italian Renaissance painting, crowds are still roughly thirty percent below summer peak, and the weather is doing what early May in Paris is supposed to do. It's the kind of alignment that doesn't happen often.

    Beyond the Louvre, the same free-entry policy covers the Musée Picasso, Versailles, and dozens of smaller national collections — making this the structural moment to act on anything you've been postponing. Check the official museum websites before you go for the latest exhibition details and timed-entry requirements.

    At Place de la Concorde, photographer and filmmaker Yann Arthus-Bertrand has installed his outdoor exhibition 'Vivre Encore' — free, central, and an easy pairing with a walk through the Tuileries. No booking required.

    Elsewhere across the city, more than 160 vintage cars are rolling through Paris streets as part of a classic car rally — expect some street-level disruption and treat any sighting as a visual bonus. The light installation 'Luminiscence: Celestial Odyssey' at the Church of Saint-Eustache is also in its final days, so today is a practical deadline if you haven't seen it. And the flea markets and brocantes running since the May Day long weekend close out today — last chance to browse before next weekend.

    Early May in Paris means fewer crowds, more access, and better conditions. That window narrows fast as June approaches.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    3 分