Portia Zvavahera</a>'s paintings are the result of her nocturnal dreams, visions that she considers to be divine messages. They're about life and death, the material and the spiritual, love and solitude, an intimacy that touches on the universal. Driven by the need to transcribe the emotional intensity of her inner world, the artist summons ghostly figures - human and animal - whose roughly sketched silhouettes are diluted in an expressionist touch of contrasting colors. With no element of setting or context, these apparitions seem to float freely on the surface of large-format canvases. The compositions are based on a superimposition of shapes, flat areas and motifs painted in oil - with brush and stick - which intermingle and contrast with the parts left in reserve. </p><p><br></p>" itemprop="description" />
Frank Gehry</a>'s project for the Fondation.</p><p>Also on the programme, short guided tours and activities for children. Take the opportunity to discover the terraces and their panoramic view.</p><p>Architectural journey</p><p>Bathed in natural daylight from a skylight, the exhibition begins in the Studio, which displays an original scale model around which visitors can walk before discovering two widescreen videos shot using drones.</p><p>Prepared in collaboration with Frank Gehry’s teams in Los Angeles, this permanent exhibition proposes an open itinerary for visitors. Like the building itself, which offers multiple possible itineraries, visitors are invited on an architectural journey that describes and explains the process that culminated in a building which is already recognised as a major new monument for Paris.</p><p>This combination creates a unique visual experience, offering a vision of the building’s striking beauty, as well as its technological complexity. The landings overlooking the “canyon” present key elements essential to understanding the building: construction, materials, design, context in Paris.</p><p>The landings can be accessed via the sole staircase where the steel structural walls have been left exposed, evoking the hull of a ship. Visitors also discover the initial sketches for the project, expressing the creative inspiration of the architect, who was awarded the prestigious Pritzker Prize in 1989.</p><p><br></p>" itemprop="description" />
Portia Zvavahera</a>'s paintings are the result of her nocturnal dreams, visions that she considers to be divine messages. They're about life and death, the material and the spiritual, love and solitude, an intimacy that touches on the universal. Driven by the need to transcribe the emotional intensity of her inner world, the artist summons ghostly figures - human and animal - whose roughly sketched silhouettes are diluted in an expressionist touch of contrasting colors. With no element of setting or context, these apparitions seem to float freely on the surface of large-format canvases. The compositions are based on a superimposition of shapes, flat areas and motifs painted in oil - with brush and stick - which intermingle and contrast with the parts left in reserve. </p><p><br></p>" />
Frank Gehry</a>'s project for the Fondation.</p><p>Also on the programme, short guided tours and activities for children. Take the opportunity to discover the terraces and their panoramic view.</p><p>Architectural journey</p><p>Bathed in natural daylight from a skylight, the exhibition begins in the Studio, which displays an original scale model around which visitors can walk before discovering two widescreen videos shot using drones.</p><p>Prepared in collaboration with Frank Gehry’s teams in Los Angeles, this permanent exhibition proposes an open itinerary for visitors. Like the building itself, which offers multiple possible itineraries, visitors are invited on an architectural journey that describes and explains the process that culminated in a building which is already recognised as a major new monument for Paris.</p><p>This combination creates a unique visual experience, offering a vision of the building’s striking beauty, as well as its technological complexity. The landings overlooking the “canyon” present key elements essential to understanding the building: construction, materials, design, context in Paris.</p><p>The landings can be accessed via the sole staircase where the steel structural walls have been left exposed, evoking the hull of a ship. Visitors also discover the initial sketches for the project, expressing the creative inspiration of the architect, who was awarded the prestigious Pritzker Prize in 1989.</p><p><br></p>" />