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Tuesday, June 2, 2026 |
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| Leandro Erlich brings immersive world of illusion and perception to the Grand Palais |
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Leandro Erlich, Window and LadderToo Late for Help, 2008, site-specific installation, metal ladder, hidden metal structure, wood, and fiberglass-brick wall, New Orleans Museum of Art, permanent collection. Courtesy Galleria Continua et Xippas Galleries © Clara Cullen.
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PARIS.- Following exhibitions in Buenos Aires, Tokyo, Miami, Milan and Helsinki, France is presenting, for the first time in Paris, a comprehensive retrospective featuring new works dedicated to one of the most distinctive and influential artists on the contemporary scene.
The exhibition invites visitors to step beyond the threshold of the ordinary and enter a world where everyday architecturehouses, elevators, staircases, and urban façadesbecomes the stage for a subtle yet powerful transformation, where illusion is not deception, but a source of knowledge, and the viewer is engaged with the artwork, becoming an active participant, encouraged not only to observe, but to question their own senses and certainties.
Born in Buenos Aires in 1973, Erlich is renowned for his monumental immersive installations which engage the viewers as active participants in the artworks. His artworks are not solely meant to be looked at: they are meant to be experienced, entered into, reflected uponcombining creativity, vision, emotion, and fun.
Buildings that can be virtually climbed, uprooted houses suspended in mid-air, elevators leading nowhere, escalators tangled like balls of yarn, disorienting and surreal sculptures, and videos that challenge our sense of normalityall these elements depict the ordinary in an extraordinary context, where everything is different from what it seems, and where our sense of reality and perception of space are blurred.
Erlichs artworks have already achieved record-breaking global viewership figures in Asia, Latin America, and Europewith complex, spectacular, site-specific installations that are rarely brought together in a single exhibition.
Erlichs practice explores the perceived foundations of reality: everyday architecture becomes a space for poetic and conceptual experimentation. The artist creates an ongoing dialogue between what we believe we know and what we actually see, between the museum experience and daily life, between certainty and doubt.
As Erlich himself explains:
I like to describe myself as a conceptual artist working in the realm of reality and perception. My focus is on reality, symbols, and the potential of meaning. I seek to create a body of workespecially in public spacesthat unlocks the imagination, disrupts normality, challenges representation, and suggests actions that construct and deconstruct situations in order to disrupt reality. Generally speaking.
Each installation creates a perceptual short circuit: first familiar, then inexplicable. The viewer begins to doubt their senses, drawn into an experience that is surprising, playful, and deeply poetic. It is precisely this active participation that completes the work.
Its hard to put Erlich into words; you have to experience it for yourself to understand it.
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