Palais of Tokyo
Paris
Who do we really see when we walk into a museum? With Globale Inversion Inversion, painter Lassana Sarré turns his attention to those we rarely notice: the security guards who welcome visitors, keep watch, and protect the works on display. Created in situ for the Palais de Tokyo, the piece makes these often-invisible...
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.
Who do we really see when we walk into a museum? With Globale Inversion Inversion, painter Lassana Sarré turns his attention to those we rarely notice: the security guards who welcome visitors, keep watch, and protect the works on display. Created in situ for the Palais de Tokyo, the piece makes these often-invisible...
At the Palais de Tokyo, Lassana Sarré spotlights the art center's security guards in a work painted in situ, from 5 June to 6 September 2026.
A slightly wider English reading when the source page is still concise.
On Expo Paris, Lassana Sarré — Globale Inversion Inversion is most useful when it is read not only as a single event but as part of a broader route through Palais of Tokyo, where exhibitions, artists and editorial themes can be compared quickly in English. This page becomes easier to place when it is connected to the strongest editorial routes already available on the site.
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 discover an in situ work that reverses our gaze and makes security guards, usually invisible, the very subjects of the painting.
["A work painted in situ, conceived for the Palais de Tokyo","A rare subject: the art center's security teams","A gesture both pictorial and political on the value of labour","In Paris, from 5 June to 6 September 2026"]
Who do we really see when we walk into a museum? With Globale Inversion Inversion, painter Lassana Sarré turns his attention to those we rarely notice: the security guards who welcome visitors, keep watch, and protect the works on display. Created in situ for the Palais de Tokyo, the piece makes these often-invisible.
To discover an in situ work that reverses our gaze and makes security guards, usually invisible, the very subjects of the painting. ["A work painted in situ, conceived for the Palais de Tokyo","A rare subject: the art center's security teams","A gesture both pictorial and political on the value of labour","In Paris, from 5 June to 6 September 2026"]
Lassana Sarré — Globale Inversion Inversion is listed with its main venue, date and booking signals so the page can support planning as well as editorial browsing.
On Expo Paris, Lassana Sarré — Globale Inversion Inversion is most useful when it is read not only as a single event but as part of a broader route through Palais of Tokyo, where exhibitions, artists and editorial themes can be compared quickly in English. This page becomes easier to place when it is connected to the strongest editorial routes already available on the site.
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.
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