Museum en herbe
Paris
Since 1996, Pokémon has moved between consoles, cards, cartoons, childhood memories and new generations of players. The Musée en herbe takes up these thirty years with an exhibition designed for a family visit. The route is not limited to lining up cult objects: it organizes a playful experience, with a treasure hunt...
A fast English reading of the key exhibition signals already available in the catalogue.
Paris
Currently on view
The shortest useful way to understand what this exhibition is about.
Since 1996, Pokémon has moved between consoles, cards, cartoons, childhood memories and new generations of players. The Musée en herbe takes up these thirty years with an exhibition designed for a family visit. The route is not limited to lining up cult objects: it organizes a playful experience, with a treasure hunt...
For Pokémon’s 30th anniversary since 1996, the Musée en herbe brings together a treasure hunt, mask, Satoshi Tajiri, historic cards and giant Game Boy consoles.
A slightly wider English reading when the source page is still concise.
On Expo Paris, Admire Them All! An Exhibition Tribute to Pokémon is most useful when it is read not only as a single event but as part of a broader route through Museum en herbe, where exhibitions, artists and editorial themes can be compared quickly in English. This page becomes easier to place when it is connected to Pop art.
For an English reader, the point of this page is also practical: it clarifies the venue, dates and booking context, then opens clear paths toward related exhibitions, artists and subjects so that the visit does not remain isolated. 3 related exhibition pages are already close enough to help compare tone, period or venue.
The strongest reasons to open the page, compare it, or book it.
To share Pokémon between children, parents and former players without reducing the visit to nostalgia. The playful devices give younger visitors a real role. The cards, Game Boy consoles and portrait of Satoshi Tajiri provide historical reference points that...
["The 30th anniversary of a universe born in 1996.","A treasure hunt and a mask for the family visit.","The portrait of Satoshi Tajiri, creator of Pokémon.","First Japanese and French cards, plus giant Game Boy consoles...
["The 30th anniversary of a universe born in 1996.","A treasure hunt and a mask for the family visit.","The portrait of Satoshi Tajiri, creator of Pokémon.","First Japanese and French cards, plus giant Game Boy consoles."]
Since 1996, Pokémon has moved between consoles, cards, cartoons, childhood memories and new generations of players. The Musée en herbe takes up these thirty years with an exhibition designed for a family visit. The route is not limited to lining up cult objects: it organizes a playful experience, with a treasure hunt.
To share Pokémon between children, parents and former players without reducing the visit to nostalgia. The playful devices give younger visitors a real role. The cards, Game Boy consoles and portrait of Satoshi Tajiri provide historical reference points that.
Admire Them All! An Exhibition Tribute to Pokémon is listed with its main venue, date and booking signals so the page can support planning as well as editorial browsing.
On Expo Paris, Admire Them All! An Exhibition Tribute to Pokémon is most useful when it is read not only as a single event but as part of a broader route through Museum en herbe, where exhibitions, artists and editorial themes can be compared quickly in English. This page becomes easier to place when it is connected to Pop art.
For an English reader, the point of this page is also practical: it clarifies the venue, dates and booking context, then opens clear paths toward related exhibitions, artists and subjects so that the visit does not remain isolated. 3 related exhibition pages are already close enough to help compare tone, period or venue.
Movement: Pop art.
The strongest reference pages already connected to this exhibition in English.
Other exhibition pages already close to this one through venue, movement, artist or theme.
is currently on view at Musée de la Monnaie de Paris.
is currently on view at Musée d'Orsay.