Try GOLD - Free
Get Cartier!
The Guardian Weekly
|October 24, 2025
Upending the very notion of art galleries, French architect Jean Nouvel has turned an old Paris department store into a museum to rival the Louvre
Come what may, Jean Nouvel will always have Paris. The City of Lights has been the stage and stomping ground of French architecture's vieux terrible since the early 1980s. Yet the building that first made his name - the Institut du Monde Arabe, a glittering, delicate, metallic creation inset with mechanical lenses to regulate light - is a lifetime away from the bemusement that met his last Parisian project, completed a decade ago.
That was the ill-starred Philharmonie, a gargantuan trophy concert hall, described in the Guardian as resembling “a pile of broken paving stones” and “a greatest hits mashup of dictators’ icons”. Nouvel may well concur, since he boycotted the building's inauguration, dismayed by budget cuts and design tweaks.
Defiantly weathering critical opprobrium, Nouvel is an auteur who revels in creating architecture that is always theatrical and never the same. “I’m not a painter or a writer,” he once said. “I don’t work in my room. I work in different cities with different people. I’m more akin to a movie-maker who makes movies on completely different subjects.”
So what are we to make of Nouvel’s latest movie: a new home for the Fondation Cartier, a private art foundation established in 1984 that’s dedicated to contemporary art? It is now headquartered in a remodelled 19th-century building in the heart of bourgeois Paris, right across the road from the Louvre.
This story is from the October 24, 2025 edition of The Guardian Weekly.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
I'm playing a gig in Greece but it's raining. Still, I can't complain
Many months ago the band I’m in was invited to play a gig at a literary festival in Greece. The date slotted nicely into our international tour schedule, between Brighton and Plymouth. But it butted up against my already booked holiday; I would have to fly home, spend 36 hours repacking and then fly straight to Greece. Mind you, I’m not complaining.
2 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Can eco-crimes be called murder? Why we should look at damage to the environment as seriously as we take serial killers
Whenever you read, watch or listen to the news, you're likely to be exposed to stories of violence and murder.
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Washington strikes ship in row with Colombia over drugs
Donald Trump last Sunday accused Colombia’s president, Gustavo Petro, of being an “illegal drug dealer” and threatened to cut US funding to the country as a Republican senator said the US would soon announce “major tariffs” on the country.
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Role of honour
As David Harewood returns as Othello, he and other Black actors discuss how best to tackle Shakespeare's formidable tragedy
6 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
'An international movement' Intelligence agencies eye neo-Nazi fight clubs
Neo-fascist fight clubs, a global locus of neo-nazism, have caught the eye of western intelligence agencies that consider them a burgeoning national security threat, according to experts and government documents reviewed by the Guardian.
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Hopes and ruins Shock as Gaza City residents return
Families who have made their way back from refugee camps in the south can barely recognise where their homes once stood
2 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Get Cartier!
Upending the very notion of art galleries, French architect Jean Nouvel has turned an old Paris department store into a museum to rival the Louvre
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Fender's gritty truths earn him the Mercury
They could have given the award to an album not already a huge hit-but this blend of kitchen- sink drama and stadium choruses is expertly done
3 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
Unvarnished truth
A day in the lives of the workers in a nail salon, where everyone's name tag says Susan
2 mins
October 24, 2025
The Guardian Weekly
UK state weakness is to blame for collapse of the alleged China spying case
The China spying row has revealed disturbing weaknesses in the processes of the UK state.
2 mins
October 24, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

