Palais de Tokyo

by Benjamin Fellmann

Published 5 August 2019
Palais de Tokyo. Art politics and aesthetics in the 20th and 21st century

Since the beginning of the 20th century, the monumental Palais de Tokyo in Paris has been a seismograph for the role of contemporary art in international perspectives and its public place in society. Today, as one of the largest art centers in Europe, it is one of the world's leading exhibition venues. Conceived in intellectual exchanges in the context of the League of Nations and planned as a state-of-the-art museum building in the "world capital of art", the Palais de Tokyo was built on the occasion of the 1937 world's fair for both a museum of the state and one of the city.

This first comprehensive monograph shows how France's first state museum of modern art became a global center of contemporary art and art theory, drawing on a vast amount of source material. The Musee national d'Art moderne, the 1937 World Exposition, the occupation and post-war period, the genesis of the Centre Pompidou in response to the Palais de Tokyo, the experimental Musee d'Art et d'Essai, the Institut des Hautes Etudes en Arts Plastiques and ambitions for a national center of photography and film since the 1980s are some of the key elements of this history up to the emergence of the contemporary institution and theories of relational aesthetics and participatory art.