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Centre Pompidou Gives Free Access to Wolfgang Tillmans’s Sweeping New Show

Celine is marking its first partnership with the Centre Pompidou by offering free public access on four select days this summer to coincide with Wolfgang Tillmans’s major new exhibition “Nothing Could Have Prepared Us – Everything Could Have Prepared Us.”

The house’s “Accès Libre par Celine” initiative launches today, June 13, and will offer complimentary entry on three additional dates: July 3, August 28, and September 22.

Wolfgang Tillmans, “Lacanau (self)” (1986). Courtesy of the artist and Centre Pompidou.

The exhibition gives Tillmans full rein over the museum’s vast second floor, typically home to the Bibliothèque publique d’information (Bpi), and will remain on view through September 22. Timed ahead of Michael Rider’s arrival as the house’s artistic director in January 2025, the collaboration signals Celine’s continued investment in the cultural sphere. As the Pompidou prepares to shut down for a years-long renovation, Tillmans’s exhibition offers a final chapter for the institution—arriving just as Celine begins a new one.

Wolfgang Tillmans, “Miss Kittin” (2001). Courtesy of the artist and Centre Pompidou.

Rather than a chronological retrospective, the installation engages directly with the building’s architecture, reimagining the space as a dynamic platform for images, objects, and ideas.

“Since the 1990s, Tillmans has constantly questioned the conventions of hanging: he suspends, juxtaposes and assembles works on walls and tables, mixing formats, materials and techniques,” said assistant curator Olga Frydryszak-Rétat. “At the Bpi, he pushes this even further by modifying the site itself—repurposing library furniture, redesigning partitions, and developing new structures that respond directly to the material and symbolic architecture of the space. This immersive and experimental intervention echoes a central part of his practice: bodies of works such as Lighter, Silver, and Freischwimmer—where photography is abstracted, materialized, and redefined—feature prominently in this exhibition. Shown in a public library, these camera-less or chemically manipulated works take on a new significance: they embody experimentation as a form of knowledge, and reinforce the idea that images can be tools for thinking, not just for seeing.”

Wolfgang Tillmans, “Lighter, yellow green III” (2009). Courtesy of the artist and Centre Pompidou.

The show follows Tillmans’s major traveling retrospective “To Look Without Fear,” which opened at New York’s Museum of Modern Art in 2022, and his recent intimate solo presentation at David Zwirner which featured standout minimal sculptures and pieces that seemed more “Space and Light” than his usual oeuvre. Whether photographing still lifes, lovers, those in his social circle, or—as he has increasingly turned toward in recent years—the stars and the sea, what runs through Tillmans’s broad oeuvre is its earnestness and honesty. Even when his subjects challenge conventional norms, there’s no sense of subversion or irony—only his distinctive heartfelt clarity.

Wolfgang Tillmans, “in flight astro (ii)” (2010). Courtesy of the artist and Centre Pompidou.


Source: Exhibition - news.artnet.com


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