Echo Delay Reverb. American Art, Francophone Thought
Palais de Tokyo, Paris, France
from 10/22/2025 to 02/15/2026
The group exhibition “ECHO DELAY REVERB: American Art, Francophone Thought” explores the history of the transatlantic circulation of forms and ideas through the works of some sixty artists, bringing together a wide variety of mediums and a number of new commissions.
It presents how art in the USA catalysed the revolutionary energies of thinkers, activists and poets who transcended genres and profoundly reshaped perspectives on the world, from Simone de Beauvoir, Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida to Frantz Fanon, Jean Genet, Aimé Césaire, Jacques Lacan, Monique Wittig, Pierre Bourdieu and Edouard Glissant… The reception and translation of their work in the United States led to unexpected forms, creating tools for a critical vision of institutions, both those of art and those of society. Theory here serves as an instrument for challenging social, aesthetic and linguistic norms, opening up new ways of seeing and engaging in the world.
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A book, Echo Delay Reverb : American Art, French Thought, edited by Naomi Beckwith with Elvan Zabunyan, professor of contemporary art history at Université Paris 1 – Panthéon-Sorbonne, and published by Editions B42, accompanies the exhibition.
Throughout the 20th century, thinkers, activists and poets in the French-speaking world transgressed genres and changed perspectives on the contemporary world. However, beyond and sometimes before their recognition in France, their ideas were translated in the United States and used to create tools for a critical view of institutions, art and society, challenging social, aesthetic and linguistic norms and opening up new ways of seeing and acting. While the flagship concept of French Theory was defined in the 1990s to evoke the enthusiastic reception that the United States reserved for authors such as Roland Barthes, Michel Foucault, Gilles Deleuze and Jacques Derrida, other figures, such as Suzanne and Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, Maryse Condé, Édouard Glissant and Monique Wittig, have been instrumental in the fields of art, postcolonial studies, feminism and gender studies. This book traces the history of the circulation of ideas, their resonance and appropriation by several generations of artists across the Atlantic, extending the eponymous exhibition conceived by Naomi Beckwith at the Palais de Tokyo.
Review of exhibition in Art Review by Louise Darblay, 21 November 2025