Personne (détail), 2024, Pigment, liant acrylique et paillettes sur toile, 250 x 200 cm © Hélène Delprat, Adagp, Paris, © Hélène Delprat, Adagp, Paris, Courtesy de l’artiste, Galerie Christophe Gaillard et Hauser & Wirth Photo : © Rebecca Fanuele

Exhibition in historical gallery of the Fondation

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Hélène Delprat

Listen! This is an Eclipse

March, 22th, 2025 – June, 15th, 2025
Guest curator: Laurence Bertrand Dorléac

From March 22 to June 15, 2025, the Fondation Maeght presents a monographic exhibition dedicated to Hélène Delprat, specifically designed for the ground-floor galleries of the historic building.

History and the history of art — including key artists associated with the Fondation Maeght — subtly permeate the work of Hélène Delprat, a major figure in the contemporary art scene. Her works have been in dialogue with those of these great masters for many years within the Fondation Maeght’s collection.

The exhibition delves into the world of Hélène Delprat, whose unique history intertwines with that of the Fondation Maeght.
At the age of 16, she discovered Giacometti and Malraux’s Imaginary Museum at the Fondation, leaving such a lasting impression that she still recalls it vividly in her current exhibition.

The poetic title of the exhibition, borrowed from Alfred Jarry, sets the tone: “Listen! It’s the eclipse.” This showcase offers the best of Hélène Delprat’s personal and shared history through a journey of over sixty works, tracing her singular adventure. Often favoring unconventional paths over assured success, she took the road less traveled. Upon leaving the École des Beaux-Arts, her stay at the Villa Médicis and her entry into the prestigious Galerie Maeght seemed to promise a clear trajectory. However, she chose to complicate her life by challenging the obvious, avoiding success, and ultimately withdrawing from the spotlight—though she never stopped painting, lamenting the struggles it entailed.

Her art is haunted by the ghosts of history (particularly war) and art history (from Piero della Francesca to William Hogarth, from Ad Reinhardt to Paul McCarthy) as well as by popular and familiar imagery. She avidly collects press images, La Gazette Drouot, and comics from yesterday and today. She constantly prints, photocopies, and classifies. As for traumatic episodes in her life, she prefers to render them as cryptic puzzles. Her inclination to mock even the darkest moments imbues her work with vitality, humor, and profound emotion.

The exhibition features more than sixty paintings, drawings, sculptures, films, photographs, and ceramics, organized into eight sequences.

Through a daily practice that combines drawing, painting, photography, archives, and video, she develops a body of work filled with self-mockery—a kind of book of hours, both dark and sensitive, where fiction and documentary coexist. She is intrigued by the idea of a humorous, monstrous, excessive, melancholic death. Her real or fictitious interviews, radio drawings, Musée des Titres, and collection of articles complement her inventory of a world that is both accidental and intentiona

Hélène Delprat, Les fées gonflables aiment McCarthy, moi aussi, 2016. Pigment, paillettes, liant acrylique sur toile, 200 x 690 cm© Hélène Delprat, Adagp, Paris, Courtesy de l’artiste, Galerie Christophe Gaillard et Hauser & Wirth© Hélène Delprat, Adagp, Paris, 2024 © Photo: Rebecca Fanuele
Roundtable – May, 17th, 2025 at 3pm
Discussion with Hélène Delprat, Laurence Bertrand Dorléac and Isabelle Maeght

As part of the exhibition “Listen! This is an Eclipse”, the Fondation Maeght invites the artist Hélène DelpratLaurence Bertrand Dorléac, guest curator of the exhibition, and Isabelle Maeght, administrator of the Fondation Maeght to a special roundtable discussion.

This conversation, free with admission to the Fondation, will take place on Saturday, May 17 at 3pm in the Nicole Dassault Gallery.

The event offers a unique opportunity to hear from the artist herself, whose singular path and imaginative, ironic, and deeply moving body of work resonates with the history of the Fondation. At the age of 16, it was here that she discovered Giacometti and Malraux’s Imaginary Museum—an encounter that left a lasting impression.

Following the round table, there will be a book signing session for the exhibition catalogue.

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