10 Landmark Art Exhibitions in Paris to Experience This September 2025.
- Times Of Paris

- Sep 9
- 2 min read
As autumn paints Paris in shades of gold, the city’s galleries and museums unveil their most ambitious exhibitions of the year. September 2025 marks a season of artistic brilliance, with curators daring to blur boundaries between classicism and contemporary thought. Across the Right Bank and Left, art is not just being shown, it’s being experienced. Paris once again proves why it remains the world’s most vital stage for cultural imagination.

At the Musée d’Orsay, Light and Shadow: The Impressionist Soul revisits Monet, Renoir, and Morisot through a new lens of emotional realism, pairing iconic works with digital light studies that reveal the science behind their radiance. Meanwhile, the Centre Pompidou’s Art in Flux invites audiences to step inside a sensory tunnel of sound and motion, merging kinetic sculpture with generative AI. The result is an experience both intimate and infinite, a dialogue between humanity and the machine.
The Palais de Tokyo offers something visceral with Raw Beauty, an exploration of identity and texture by ten global female artists who use materials like soil, fabric, and light to question the body as landscape. Nearby, Fondation Louis Vuitton hosts The Geometry of Grace, a retrospective of Japanese architect Tadao Ando, whose concrete minimalism feels almost spiritual against the Parisian skyline.
In the smaller, often quieter corners of the city, equally profound stories unfold. Galerie Perrotin’s The Future of Still Life reinterprets a centuries-old genre with works that challenge our perception of silence and abundance. In Le Marais, a pop-up exhibition titled Echoes of the Earth brings together indigenous artists from South America and Oceania, their work pulsing with ancestral rhythm and ecological urgency.
September’s art scene in Paris is not defined by spectacle, but by sincerity. Every exhibition feels like an invitation, to pause, to look, to feel. Whether one stands before a Monet or a holographic sculpture, the emotion is the same: awe, humility, connection. Paris, in all its creative maturity, reminds us that art is not merely what we see on walls, but what stirs within us when the light changes.












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