Press Release

l’m creating entertainment, which has a serious message if you want to read into it, but I don’t expect to change anyone’s minci – l’m just showing them what they think they may know already.’
Martin Parr, 2021.

This exhibition revisits the work of the late British photographer Martin Parr, bringing together a selection of series produced since the 1970s that find new resonance in light of the growing disarray of the contemporary world. For over fifty years, Parr travelled the globe not as an activist but as a relentless and amused observer, offering a lucid and unsparing portrait of global imbalances and the excesses of contemporary life: the grotesque face and damaging effects of mass tourism, the rise of car culture, our dependence on technology, unbridled consumerism, and our ambivalent relationship with other living beings.

Through his characteristically offbeat vision, Parr also indirectly engaged with the human behaviours driving contemporary climate change: the unrestrained use of transport, reliance on fossil fuels, global overconsumption, and environ mental degradation. Over time, and as social attitudes have shifted, what once appeared merely entertaining has revealed itself to be increasingly serious. ln retrospect, Parr’s corrosive irony places him within a long tradition of British satire: his sharp wit and deadpan humour deliver a critical, and at times merciless, view of the world we inhabit.

Curators: Quentin Bajac, in collaboration with Martin Parr and Clémentine de la Féronnière.

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About the Artist

Martin Parr (1952–2025) was a British documentary photographer and photobook maker known for his brightly coloured, satirical images of everyday life, leisure, class, and consumer culture. Over five decades, his photobooks and major series such as ‘The Last Resort’ (1983–1985) and ‘Common Sense’ (1995–1999) helped redefine contemporary documentary photography.

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About the Gallery
Jeu de paume, nowadays known as real tennis, court tennis or courte paume, is a ball-and-court game that originated in France. It was an indoor precursor of tennis played without racquets, though these were eventually introduced.
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1 Place de la Concorde
Jardin des Tuileries
Paris
France
Opening Hours
Tuesday
11am – 9pm

Wednesday – Sunday
11am – 7pm

Closed Monday

Closed on January 1st, May 1st, July 14th and December 25th
(1)
Paris 1 Place de la Concorde, Jardin des Tuileries
Jeu de Paume
1 Place de la Concorde, Jardin des Tuileries, Paris, France
+33 1 47 03 12 50
http://www.jeudepaume.org

Opening hours
Tuesday
11am – 9pm

Wednesday – Sunday
11am – 7pm

Closed Monday

Closed on January 1st, May 1st, July 14th and December 25th
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