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Galerie Sit Down

Galerie Taménaga

Galerie Suzanne Tarasieve

Carte blanche à Camille Bréchignac

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Tai Shani 1976, England

  • Tai Shani, Our Astrolatrous Commune, 2023 © Fabio Mantegna

Tai Shani, Our Astrolatrous Commune, 2023 © Fabio Mantegna

Carte blanche granted to Camille Bréchignac

Galerie Suzanne Tarasieve is thrilled to announce a solo show by Tai Shani in its Project Room, a proposal by Camille Bréchignac who has been entrusted with a curatorial Carte Blanche.

Winner of the prestigious Turner Prize in 2019, alongside Lawrence Abu Hamdan, Helen Cammock and Oscar Murillo, Tai Shani has established herself as one of the most influential and innovative artists of her generation in England. Yet, her work remains little-known in France, where it has rarely been exhibited, with the exception of a specific commission for the foyer of Lafayette Anticipations during the Festival Échelle Humaine in 2023.

Renowned for her multi-disciplinary practice combining installations, films, performances and texts, Tai Shani conjures up historical, mythological and literary figures to construct a visual and narrative universe at once grotesque, kitsch and gothic.

The show at Galerie Suzanne Tarasieve will feature key elements from her recent exhibition at Cosmic House in 2024. There, Tai Shani explored the mimesis between body and architecture, transforming Cosmic House into an organic extension of the human anatomy. Each element of his installation embodies a part of the body: sculptures evoke limbs or organs, paintings and prints suggest skin textures or blood flow, while architectural spaces become metaphors for cavities or internal structures. This anthropomorphic approach recalls historical references such as Carlo Mollino’s houses, Dali’s Pavilion of Venus, or the castles of Ludwig II of Bavaria, where architecture becomes a reflection of the intimate and the biological. They also refer to an enduring imaginary, that of the monster whose various body parts are said to be animated by a divine breath – from Prometheus, who is said to have created mankind from water and earth, to Frankenstein.

As Camille Bréchignac, curator of the exhibition, explains: “Tai Shani’s work is the precursor of a whole generation of artists emerging today, using fiction and speculation as a means of reimagining our social and political structures. His use of worldbuilding, his summoning of classical and even archaic figures, and his use of an abundant aesthetic vocabulary since 2010 have established a radical rupture that should be honored and analyzed today. It’s a great opportunity to present his work in Paris, and for visitors to discover it in such an intimate context as a Project Room.”

This exhibition is part of the Paris Gallery Weekend, offering a unique opportunity to discover or rediscover the work of this major artist in a Parisian context.

Solo show of Tai Shani

From May 17th to June 21st, 2025

7 Rue Pastourelle
Paris, France
01 42 71 76 54 www.suzanne-tarasieve.com

The gallery

After running for 25 years a gallery outside of Paris in Barbizon, Suzanne Tarasieve opened her first space in Paris in 2003, in the Louise Weiss neighborhood. In 2008, she opened a second space, LOFT 18, offering temporary exhibition and a residency program in order to support artists from abroad.

In 2011, Suzanne Tarasieve moved her main gallery space to Le Marais, showing established and emerging artists, with an international exhibition program underlining the great historical transformations of the XXth and XXIst century.

The gallery produces and exhibits works spawning from german neo-expressionism to recent works by emerging artists. Through a cooperative and horizontal approach, the gallery is committed to supporting artists in the development of their projects and fostering encounters and dialogues between artists of different generations, exhibition curators, institutions, and journalists.
After the passing of Suzanne Tarasieve in December 2022, the gallery is taken over by her four employees who perpetuate the work of the now legendary founder.

Gallery artists

Georg Baselitz, Jean Bedez, Romain Bernini, Alkis Boutlis, Alin Bozbiciu, Thomas Buswell, Gil Heitor Cortesão, Neal Fox, Russell Crotty Nina Mae Fowler, Recycle Group, Le Gun, Jörg Immendorff, Eva Jospin, Mari Katayama, Benjamin Katz, Jürgen Klauke, Youcef Korichi, Markus Lüpertz, Shanthamani M., Boris Mikhaïlov, Lucien Murat, Ed Paschke, A.R. Penck, Tim Plamper, Sigmar Polke, Léopold Rabus, Pierre Schwerzmann, Terry Taylor, Juergen Teller, Anna Tuori, Anne Wenzel

Galerie sélectionnée par Daria de Beauvais

In the thematic « Carte blanche »

Lalitha Lajmi. Performer and Child, 2015. Watercolor on paper, 21 x 14 inches. Courtesy of the Estate of Lalitha Lajmi and Gallery Art & Soul, Mumbai.

Galerie Anne Barrault

Lalitha Lajmi 1932 — 2023, India

Femme Jibóia, Kássia Borges Mytara, photo Sami Korhonen @ricardofernandesgallery

Ricardo Fernandes

Kássia Borges Mytara 1962, Brazil

"'Femme Jibóia"

Elizabeth Lennard, Flower Mold, Red, 2010.

Les Douches la Galerie

August Sander, Daniel Masclet, Anna et Bernhard Blume, Michel Journiac, Valérie Belin, Stéphane Couturier, Elizabeth Lennard, Henri Foucault, Denis Darzacq, Alain Fleischer, Patrick Tosani, Ghislaine Vappereau, François Kollar, Roger Catherineau, Bernard Plossu etc..

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"Dans ma cuisine"

In the thematic « Contemporary Art »

Ruben Pang, Sans Titre, 2024, 22O x 150 cm.

PACT

Ruben Pang 1990, Singapore

"Némésis"

Ahmed Legs, framed photography by ©️Hassan Hajjaj, 2022_1443. Courtesy of Ahmed, Hassan Hajjaj Studio & 193 Gallery

193 Gallery

Hassan Hajjaj 1961, Morocco

"Legs"

Sophie Calle, Troublante croisière (divergence de points de vue), 2023,

Perrotin

Sophie Calle 1953, France

"Séance de rattrapage"

In the thematic « Installation »

Christian Fogarolli, MauvaisCorps

Galerie Alberta Pane

Christian Fogarolli 1983, France

"Mauvais Corps"

Femme Jibóia, Kássia Borges Mytara, photo Sami Korhonen @ricardofernandesgallery

Ricardo Fernandes

Kássia Borges Mytara 1962, Brazil

"'Femme Jibóia"

Joris Van de Moortel
music enjoys direct access to the soul, has an immediate echo of response since we have music within ourselves, 2025, Huile sur lin et cadre en acier de l’artiste avec deux sculptures de tête faites en résine acrylique et patine effet bronze (une avec le nez droit et une avec le nez cassé)

Galerie Nathalie Obadia

Joris Van de Moortel 1983, Belgium

"Le poids du ciel illumine la terre"

In the thematic « Sculpture »

PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973), Femme agenouillée se coiffant,  1906, Numéroté : 1/10,
Porte le cachet du fondeur : C. Valsuani Cire Perdue, Bronze à patine nuancée, Hauteur : 40 cm. Succession Picasso 2025. Crédit Photo : Cécil Mathieu

HELENE BAILLY

Pablo Picasso 1881 — 1973, Spain

Sophia Fassi, La sieste I, 2024, huile sur toile, 114 x 146 cm, ©Galerie Berthet-Aittouares

Berthet-Aittouarès

Eve Aschheim, Claude Buraglio, Marie-Claude Bugeaud, Sophia Fassi, Anne Ferrer, Liliane Klapisch, Vera Molnar, Nil Yalter.

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"8 femmes"

Photo by Matt Emonson

Galerie Lelong

Alison Saar 1956, United States

"Sweet Life"

In the thematic « Women Artists »

Femme Jibóia, Kássia Borges Mytara, photo Sami Korhonen @ricardofernandesgallery

Ricardo Fernandes

Kássia Borges Mytara 1962, Brazil

"'Femme Jibóia"

Laura Garcia Karras, Oraison, 2024, Huile sur toile, 180 x 150 cm, Courtesy de l’artiste et Galerie Anne-Sarah Bénichou

Galerie Anne-Sarah Bénichou

Laura Garcia Karras 1988, France

"Calisté"

Sophia Fassi, La sieste I, 2024, huile sur toile, 114 x 146 cm, ©Galerie Berthet-Aittouares

Berthet-Aittouarès

Eve Aschheim, Claude Buraglio, Marie-Claude Bugeaud, Sophia Fassi, Anne Ferrer, Liliane Klapisch, Vera Molnar, Nil Yalter.

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"8 femmes"

In the tour « Marais »

Hans Josephsohn, Untitled, 1971, Brass, 66 x 218 x 59 cm (25,98 x 85,83 x 23,23 in), Ed. 2 of 6 + 2 AP, Courtesy Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, London · Paris · Salzburg · Milan · Seoul
© Josephsohn Estate

Thaddaeus Ropac

Hans Josephsohn 1920 — 2012, Switzerland

"Sculptures 1952 - 2002"

Christian Fogarolli, MauvaisCorps

Galerie Alberta Pane

Christian Fogarolli 1983, France

"Mauvais Corps"

Guillaume Castel, Palma, acier Corten et inox, 19 x 25 x 29 cm, 2024, Courtesy Galerie Ariane C-Y, œuvre Guillaume Castel, ©image Gregory Copitet.

Galerie Ariane C-Y

Guillaume Castel 1980, France

"Jardin des simples"

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