PARIS.- Magdalena Abakanowicz's work returns to Paris after more than 40 years. Although her radical and pioneering works have been regularly exhibited around the world, from the United States to Japan and Europe, and most recently at the Tate Modern in London and the Musée Cantonal des Beaux-Arts in Lausanne, the French public has only had the opportunity to admire them once, at the Musée d'Art Moderne in 1982.
On November 20, 2025, the Musée Bourdelle in Paris opened the first major monographic exhibition of Magdalena Abakanowicz's work, La trame de l'existence / The thread of life, restoring the artist to her rightful place among the great sculptors of the 20th century. The Musée Bourdelle offers a look at the artist's work from the perspective of her biography and political engagement, presenting a broad overview of her work: over 70 monumental sculptures, textile works, drawings, and photographs. The exhibition will be open until April 12, 2026 and will be accompanied by a rich program of events.
The exhibition is the result of cooperation between the Marta Magdalena Abakanowicz Kosmowska Foundation and Jan Kosmowski and the museum, with support from the Adam Mickiewicz Institute and the Polish Institute in Paris.
The thread of lifethe first major retrospective dedicated to Magdalena Abakanowicz in France
Magdalena Abakanowicz (19302017) was not only one of the most important artists on the Polish cultural scene of the 20th century, but also a key figure in the avant-garde of Central and Eastern Europe. A comprehensive presentation of her work in Paris, one of the capitals of world art, gives the artist a whole new dimensionthat of a precursor of contemporary artistic practices in a global perspective.
Abakanowicz's biography is marked by the difficult experiences that defined the 20th century in Poland: war, communist repression, and censorship. This found resonance in her work, which took the form of immersive, poetic, sometimes disturbing sculptures and fabrics, often commenting on political issues.
Inspired by the organic world, seriality, and monumentality, her work also has an undeniable power and relevance, remaining a living reference to contemporary ecological issues. Inspired by the organic world, seriality, and monumentality, her work also possesses undeniable power and relevance, remaining a living reference to contemporary ecological, humanistic, and feminist issues.
The exhibition title The thread of life takes a biographical and political perspective, taking viewers on a journey through timefrom Abakanowicz's early work to her mature, most recognizable works such as The Crowd and Embryology. The newly restored interiors of the Musée Bourdelle display over 70 monumental sculptures, textile works, drawings, and photographs. The concept for the presentation of Abakanowicz's works was developed by the exhibition's chief curator, Ophélie Ferlier Bouat, who is the director of the Musée Bourdelle, and the scientific curator, Jérôme Godeau, a long-time expert at the institution, along with Colin Lemoine, art historian, and Margaux Coïc, exhibition assistant.
The title of the exhibition, The thread of life combines two terms that the artist used to describe her work: fabric as an organism, the interweaving of body and destiny. Abakanowicz created a unique collection of works in which fabric becomes a metaphor for the human body, transformed and experienced by the upheavals of history. Each work expresses the tension between fragility and monumentality. In the vast spaces of the museum, visitors can move among impressive, almost totemic sculptures that raise questions about the human condition, community, and memory. The dialogue with the austere architecture of the concrete walls enhances the impact of the works, providing space for discussion and reflection.