Among the must-see exhibitions in Europe, Corps et Âmes undoubtedly stands out for the exceptional quality of its artworks and the central theme that runs through it: the relationship between body and soul. This theme is not just a connecting thread between certain works in the collection but a key to understanding its identity—like a constantly evolving, ever-changing body.
For years, the Pinault Collection has functioned as a living organism, absorbing stories, tensions, and visions, reflecting on the great questions of contemporary human existence, and promoting art as its most authentic form of expression. In Corps et Âmes, each artwork resonates with its own intensity, intertwining with others in a layered dialogue—like a symphony of voices.
If you plan to visit before August 25, 2025, you might want to set this reading aside and immerse yourself in the experience without spoilers.
But if you can’t make it, we’ll take you on a journey through this unmissable exhibition.
Do not miss this one: the Pinault Collection is on show at Tadao Ando's Bourse de Commerce
From the evocative portraits of Lynette Yiadom-Boakye to the powerful visual manifesto of Arthur Jafa, “Corps et Âmes” presents a journey through iconic works from the Pinault Collection, capturing the essence of the human experience.
Vingt-quatre fantômes par seconde, 2025
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Aurélien Mole / Pinault Collection
Housepainter I, 1984-1988
Autobody filler, polychromed, mixed media, with accessories
Overall dimensions variable
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
Philip Guston
Lamp, 1974
Oil on canvas
171,5 × 265,4 cm
Pinault Collection
Duane Hanson
Seated Artist, 1971
Polyester resin and fibreglass, polychromed in oil, mixed media with accessories
129,5 × 86,4 × 99,1 cm
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Silueta Sangrienta, 1975
Super 8 mm film, colour, no sound
1 min. 51 sec.
Pinault Collection
© The Estate of Ana Mendieta Collection, LLC / Adagp, Paris
Courtesy de Galerie Lelong & Co.
Gideon Appah
The Woman Bathing, 2021
Oil, acrylic on canvas
Diptych, 120 × 300 cm (each panel)
Pinault Collection
© Gideon Appah
Gideon Appah
The Confidant, 2021
Oil, acrylic on canvas
Diptych, 120 × 300 cm (each panel)
Pinault Collection
© Gideon Appah
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Cave, 2021
Oil on Lubugo (bark cloth)
200 × 150 cm
Pinault Collection
Michael Armitage
Dandora (Xala, Musicians), 2022
Oil on Lubugo (bark cloth)
220 × 440 cm
Pinault Collection
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection
View Article details
- Giorgia Aprosio
- 23 March 2025
Prelude: Baselitz, Appah, and Cherri
Pinault Collection
© Arthur Jafa
View of the exhibition “Corps et âmes”, Bourse de Commerce – Pinault Collection, Paris, 2025.
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Pinault Collection
© Arthur Jafa
View of the exhibition “Corps et âmes”, Bourse de Commerce – Pinault Collection, Paris, 2025.
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Pinault Collection
© Arthur Jafa
View of the exhibition “Corps et âmes”, Bourse de Commerce – Pinault Collection, Paris, 2025.
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Opening the exhibition is Meine neue Mütze (2003), a monumental self-portrait in cedar wood in which a young Georg Baselitz holds a skull in his hands, evoking a stark contrast between innocence and death. With its totemic presence, it introduces the viewer to the dreamlike figures of Gideon Appah, suspended between dream and memory, and to the historic 24 display cases arranged around the rotunda of the Bourse de Commerce.
Originally intended to showcase commercial projects, these display cases now host Ali Cherri’s installation, transforming them into a journey inspired by Le Sang d'un poète (1930) by Jean Cocteau. Calligraphed phrases from the film emerge on the glass surfaces, creating a dialogue between past and present, between reality and fiction. The exhibited artifacts oscillate between archaeological relic and contemporary creation, questioning the value of historical testimony and its interpretation over time.
Crescendo: Jafa’s Manifesto Under the Dome of the Bourse
At the center of the rotunda pulses a work of immense symbolic power: Love is the Message, the Message is Death (2016) by Arthur Jafa. A visceral montage of archival footage and found videos, it reconstructs African American history through a collage of images that alternate between violence, injustice, cultural appropriation, simulacra, and the elevation of figures to pop icons. The visuals unfold to the soundtrack of Ultralight Beam by Kanye West—a song that, in 2016, seemed to embody a message of hope and transcendence but today adds another layer of meaning to the work, carrying with it the inevitable ambiguity tied to its creator.
Lamp, 1974
Oil on canvas
171,5 × 265,4 cm
Pinault Collection
Duane Hanson
Seated Artist, 1971
Polyester resin and fibreglass, polychromed in oil, mixed media with accessories
129,5 × 86,4 × 99,1 cm
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Housepainter I (detail), 1984-1988
Autobody filler, polychromed, mixed media, with accessories
Overall dimensions variable
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
© Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Niney et Marca Architectes, agence Pierre-Antoine Gatier.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection
Jafa’s installation reverberates beneath the grand dome of the building, bouncing off the 1,400-square-meter fresco created in 1889 for the Chamber of Commerce. This monumental artwork represents the five continents in an imagery deeply connected to the expansionist vision of late 19th-century France. It guides visitors to the upper floor, where they are met by Duane Hanson’s hyperrealist painters, frozen in a moment of rest. The room is bathed in the same intense pink that dominates Philip Guston’s paintings (Lamp, 1974; The Window, 1969)—fleshy masses from which fragments of restless forms emerge, almost like an epiphany, searching for meaning in a world scarred by the brutality of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King’s assassinations, racial uprisings from Chicago to Los Angeles, and the lynchings of the Ku Klux Klan.
Intermezzo: The Triumph of Painting
The exploration of the body as a symbol, archive, or political instrument resurfaces in the silhouettes of Kara Walker, the drawings of William Kentridge, and the interventions of Robin Rhode and Anne Imhof. Painting plays a central role, featuring artists whose work stands out in the contemporary landscape for its expressive power. This is particularly evident in the three portraits by Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, a London-based artist of Ghanaian descent. Her refined yet immediate painterly language captures both the depth of her subjects and the emotions of the viewer, with a bold brushstroke that recalls the traditions of Manet, Degas, and Goya.
“Avignon“ series, 2014
Oil on canvas
8 elements: 480 × 300 cm (each)
Pinault Collection
Photo : Florent Michel
“Avignon“ series, 2014
Oil on canvas
8 elements: 480 × 300 cm (each)
Pinault Collection
Photo : Florent Michel
The exhibition concludes with a grand finale set to the notes of Avignon (2014), Georg Baselitz’s monumental cycle of eight paintings—both dramatic and spectacular—towering over the viewer. First presented at the 2015 Venice Biennale curated by Okwui Enwezor, these canvases depict eight men turned upside down, frozen in an endless descent. Their fall, stretched in time, takes on an almost hypnotic, pacified quality, transforming into a weightless dance. As the viewer absorbs the scene, echoes of portraits by Pablo Picasso, Lucas Cranach, Egon Schiele, and Edvard Munch emerge, paying tribute to the Masters of art history who made the human body the ultimate key to depicting the soul.
Coda: Until the Final Note
Hidden in the underground auditorium, the final movement unfolds: a group of young Jamaicans dances to dancehall under pouring rain, moving to the beat of amplified bass in Cecilia Bengolea’s black-and-white video. A powerful image of resistance and regeneration, it closes the exhibition with an explosion of energy and hope, like a final note left vibrating in the air.
Opening image: Duane Hanson, Housepainter I, 1984-1988
Photo: Aurélien Mole / Pinault Collection
Ali Cherri
Vingt-quatre fantômes par seconde, 2025
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Duane Hanson
Housepainter I, 1984-1988
Autobody filler, polychromed, mixed media, with accessories
Overall dimensions variable
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
Philip Guston
Lamp, 1974
Oil on canvas
171,5 × 265,4 cm
Pinault Collection
Duane Hanson
Seated Artist, 1971
Polyester resin and fibreglass, polychromed in oil, mixed media with accessories
129,5 × 86,4 × 99,1 cm
Pinault Collection
© Adagp, Paris, 2025
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Ana Mendieta
Silueta Sangrienta, 1975
Super 8 mm film, colour, no sound
1 min. 51 sec.
Pinault Collection
© The Estate of Ana Mendieta Collection, LLC / Adagp, Paris
Courtesy de Galerie Lelong & Co.
Gideon Appah
The Woman Bathing, 2021
Oil, acrylic on canvas
Diptych, 120 × 300 cm (each panel)
Pinault Collection
© Gideon Appah
Gideon Appah
The Confidant, 2021
Oil, acrylic on canvas
Diptych, 120 × 300 cm (each panel)
Pinault Collection
© Gideon Appah
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection.
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection
Michael Armitage
Cave, 2021
Oil on Lubugo (bark cloth)
200 × 150 cm
Pinault Collection
Michael Armitage
Dandora (Xala, Musicians), 2022
Oil on Lubugo (bark cloth)
220 × 440 cm
Pinault Collection
Photo: Nicolas Brasseur/Pinault Collection