Parcours des Mondes to open to the public September 6–11
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Parcours des Mondes to open to the public September 6–11
Modèle de tipi Cheyenne, Plaines centrales, Amérique du Nord Vers 1860 Peau de buffle et pigments, 144,5 x 80 cm © Donald Ellis Gallery, photo John Bigelow Taylor.



PARIS.- Well known for more than a decade as the world’s premier international tribal art fair that maintains the highest standards for the select material offered there, Parcours des Mondes broadened its scope last year to include fine Asian art and will continue to do so this year, when it is open to the public September 6–11, 2016. Once again, Parcours des Mondes will offer collectors and enthusiasts alike the opportunity to experience remarkable treasures of Oceanic, African, and Native American art, as well as both classical and contemporary Asian art creations.

While Parcours de Mondes is always innovative, it is anchored in Paris’ historic Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood. From Rue Guénégaud to Rue des Beaux Arts by way of Rue Visconti, visitors to this art fair will discover a wonderfully stimulating version of the Left Bank, brought to life by sculptures, ancestor figures, and spirit masks. The excitement that results from this exotic atmosphere sets the neighborhood alight and makes Parcours des Mondes a not-to-be-missed event for art lovers.

As it does every year, Parcours des Mondes will feature a number of exhibitions produced by art dealers from France and the world over. These provide its visitors an incomparable opportunity to gain new perspectives about the aesthetic expressions of faraway peoples. Among the many special exhibitions planned for 2016 are one focused on African subjects including Bwiti reliquaries at Galerie Benard Dulon and Kongo fetishes at Galerie Lecomte, as well as an exploration of the strange world of "Monsieur X" by Serge Le Guennan. Yann Ferrandin will feature a show titled "Hair", which will be devoted to the coiffures and hair ornaments produced by tribal societies that will certainly be met with interest.

Galleries specializing in North American and Oceanic art also plan a number of exciting thematic exhibitions. Donald Ellis Gallery’s exhibition will include an exceptional model tepee, and Michael Evans will present an exhibition titled "Savage Island: the Art of Niue". Galerie Flak will focus on shamanic masks and sculptures from Alaska and Siberia.

Offerings by Asian art dealers will be equally abundant. Four galleries—Christophe Hioco, Eric Pouillot, Alexis Renard, and Kapoor Galleries Inc.—will join forces on Rue de Seine to produce an important exhibition devoted to the arts of Asia. As they stroll through the streets of the fair, collectors and aficionados will want to stop and admire the sumptuous works offered by Max Rutherston Ltd, a dealer specialized in Japanese art and netsuke. Gregg Baker Asian Art and Kitsune Gallery, both specializing in Japanese art, will return to the show again this year. Their continued participation emphasizes Parcours des Mondes’ commitment to promoting the highest level of dealers in this field.

Parcours des Mondes always hosts an array of foreign galleries. 2016 will be no exception, and the show will continue to maintain its distinctly international flavor. Eighty-four galleries of worldwide renown, including twelve from the United States and sixteen from Belgium, will show at this 15th Parcours des Mondes.

A retrospective exhibition celebrating the 15th anniversary of Parcours des Mondes will be organized by Tribal Art magazine and shown at Espace Tribal. Featuring original artworks and photographs, it will trace the fair’s evolution and history, feature highlights since its inception in 2001, and examine how it quickly became the “central event” in the tribal art field. It is also an opportunity to honor those, both dealers and collectors, who have contributed to the growth and expansion of Parcours des Mondes over the years.

Aptly enough, the topic of “collecting” will be the focus of this year’s Café Tribal morning meetings with a variety of specialists, hosted and moderated by Elena Martinez-Jacquet, editor-in-chief of Tribal Art magazine. The focus will be on great collectors, and the discussions will center on understanding the particular sensibilities of those who shaped the history of tribal art in the Western world, elevating it to the fine art form it is understood to be today.

The fair’s programming and the many and varied events it regularly sponsors attract new dealers and new collectors with wide-ranging interests. This dynamism also has a palpable effect on the city of Paris itself, which offers programs and events of its own in connection with Parcours. This year, one of those events will be a gala evening put on by the Musée Cernuschi as a benefit for the museum’s Society of Friends.

While maintaining the high standards and eclecticism that forged its identity, Parcours des Mondes continues to develop and evolve in such a way as to be able to offer its visitors the opportunity to discover an ever-broadening scope of fascinating art forms. These spiritually charged works provide a window into the imaginations of other peoples and allow insight into the shared overarching principles that in the past shaped the collective unconscious.

Ritual objects carry within them both the weight and the evanescence of man’s most deep-seated fears that are at the root of the human condition. Life is both given and taken away, and man has unceasingly used art to question in his quest to understand this incomprehensible cycle. The artifact, as a product of the human spirit, is a sign of the ambivalence of the realities we face: the fear of seeing ourselves reduced to nothing and the hope we harbor to transcend our physical disappearance.

Many of the tribal and Asian artworks included in Parcours des Mondes represent attempts to answer universal and timeless questions that, precisely because they never will be answered, make them all the more compelling due to their enduring and unchanging nature.










Today's News

September 4, 2016

New York's 9/11 museum welcomes art on attacks' 15th anniversary

The Glass House presents installation by Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama

Koller Zurich to offer museum-quality paintings and fascinating trompe-l'oeil ceramics

Portland Art Museum announces exhibition and repatriation of Korean Buddhist painting

Paul Kasmin Gallery to open its inaugural exhibition of acclaimed photographer Robert Polidori

Artangel commissions artists, performers and writers to create works for Reading Prison

Colnaghi brings major Old Master works to contemporary art space in Detroit

Solo show by Valeska Soares opens at Galeria Fortes Vilaça

The work of British sculptor Richard Deacon on view at the Langen Foundation

Gemstones: Aquamarine to Zircon on display at University of Delaware's Mineralogical Museum

Anke Bangma appointed new artistic director TENT Rotterdam

Fine books, early maps, and rare autographed material at heart of Waverly's auction

Parcours des Mondes to open to the public September 6–11

Daylight Books publishes "A Crack in the World: Five Acres in Mariposa by Barbara Kyne"

Abstract Expressionist Nina K Cullen to launch new solo exhibit "Pixelated World"

Kestner Gesellschaft opens exhibition of works by the German painter Monika Baer

The Winter Art & Antiques Fair, Olympia, returns from 31st October to 6th November

Exhibition featuring new works by artist Mike Egan to open at Matthew Rachman Gallery

New exhibition "Constructing New Photographies" to open at Pelham Art Center

Milanese festival dedicated to innovation and contemporary art to open in October

Bayne Peterson's fist solo exhibition of sculptures at Kristen Lorello to open in New York

Edward Barber & Jay Osgerby and the V&A to present Forecast at the London Design Biennale 2016




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