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2026 will be a historic year for photography lovers. From the bicentenary of the medium’s birth celebrated in autumn in France, to testamentary retrospectives that are reshaping how we see an art in perpetual mutation — the worldwide programme is shaping up to be one of the most dense and moving of the decade. From Paris to Kyoto, via Arles, Perpignan and Hamburg, here are the ten unmissable events of the season.

One particular note must be made from the outset: Martin Parr, the great ironic and benevolent witness of our consumerist civilisations, passed away on 6 December 2025. His major exhibition at the Jeu de Paume, Global Warning, conceived with him right up to his final months, now takes on a testamentary dimension that makes it one of the most poignant events of the cultural season. You must go.

1. Martin Parr — Global Warning — Jeu de Paume, Paris

Black and white photographs on display in a museum gallery
Photo by Eric Prouzet on Unsplash

The visual testament of a giant

30 Jan. – 24 May 2026 Jeu de Paume, Paris (1st arr.) ~€14 (full price) 1h to 1h30

From 30 January to 24 May 2026, the Jeu de Paume dedicates a major exhibition to Martin Parr (1952–2025). Conceived with the British photographer before his passing on 6 December 2025, Global Warning brings together some 180 works produced from the 1970s to 2024. Curated by Quentin Bajac, the institution’s director, it re-reads fifty years of documentary photography through the lens of the upheavals of our era. According to Expo Paris, this retrospective constitutes « both a summation of an exceptional career and a visual testament addressed to a humanity blind to its own excesses ».

Through his many series — begun in the British Isles and Ireland, then extended to all five continents from the 1990s — recurring themes emerge: the turpitudes of mass tourism, the dominance of the car, technological dependency, consumerist frenzy, and our ambivalent relationship with the living world. According to British Council France, the exhibition is organised into five thematic sections that illustrate the acuity of his satirical and deeply humane gaze.

Exhibition highlights

  • 180 works spanning 5 decades of career
  • Unseen series and personal archives never exhibited in France
  • Simultaneous exhibition of Jo Ractliffe at the same venue
  • Catalogue co-published with Phaidon, available in bookshops
Pixidia tip: Book online in advance via billetterie.jeudepaume.org to avoid queuing, especially at weekends. The Tuesday late opening (until 9pm) is ideal for a more intimate visit. Less than two months remain — don’t delay.
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2. Nan Goldin — This Will Not End Well — Grand Palais, Paris

Grand Palais in Paris, ornate facade and glass dome
Photo by Shalev Cohen on Unsplash

The rock star of photography takes over the Grand Palais

18 Mar. – 21 Jun. 2026 Grand Palais + Salpêtrière, Paris (8th/13th arr.) ~€20–25 (Grand Palais) / Free (Salpêtrière) 2h–3h (two venues)

From 18 March to 21 June 2026, the Grand Palais hosts for the first time in France a major retrospective of Nan Goldin, a key figure in contemporary photography. Intimate, political and deeply emotional, her work explores more than forty years of lives, friendships and struggles. According to the Grand Palais, this is « the first retrospective in France devoted to her videos and slideshows, which the artist describes as films composed of photographs ».

After Stockholm, Amsterdam, Berlin and Milan, the exhibition arrives in Paris across two complementary venues. At the Grand Palais, six major works spanning fifty years of creation are presented in pavilions designed by architect Hala Wardé. Among them, the iconic series The Ballad of Sexual Dependency, The Other Side and Sisters, Saints, Sibyls. This last installation also takes over the Chapelle Saint-Louis-de-la-Salpêtrière — with free admission — with a striking spiritual dimension.

Not to be missed

  • The Ballad of Sexual Dependency — a 700-image slideshow lasting 45 minutes
  • Sisters, Saints, Sibyls at the Chapelle de la Salpêtrière (free entry)
  • Pavilion scenography — each space designed for a single work
  • First complete Parisian retrospective of Goldin in 20 years
Pixidia tip: Don’t skip the Salpêtrière — most hurried visitors overlook this second installation, which is nonetheless essential to understanding the work. It is free Tuesday–Saturday 4pm to 8pm (10pm on Fridays) and Sunday 11am to 7pm. Combine both venues for a full Goldin day.

3. Kyotographie 2026 — EDGE — Kyoto, Japan

Traditional Kyoto temple in spring with women in kimono
Photo by Damian Hutter on Unsplash

Photographic art takes over the millennial city

18 Apr. – 17 May 2026 Kyoto, Japan (multiple venues) ~€10–14/exhibition (pass available) Mid-April: cherry blossoms + festival opening

In its 14th edition, KYOTOGRAPHIE runs from 18 April to 17 May 2026 under the theme EDGE — « border, boundary, threshold ». According to PhMuseum, 13 photographers and artists from 8 countries explore together « experimental image-making, social and historical peripheries, and urban and technological thresholds ». A particularly resonant theme in the world of 2026.

The festival transforms Kyoto into a living gallery: traditional townhouses (machiya), imperial palaces, museums and temples metamorphose into exhibition spaces designed with local architects and craftspeople. Among the highlights of this edition: a retrospective of Daido Moriyama, organised with the Instituto Moreira Salles and the Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation, presented at the Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art; a tribute to Palestinian photographer Fatma Hassona; and the latest work by Kenyan photographer Thandiwe Muriu created during her residency in Kyoto.

2026 programme highlights

  • Daido Moriyama — retrospective at the KYOCERA Museum of Art
  • Anton Corbijn — David Bowie, Tom Waits and his icons in black and white
  • Thandiwe Muriu — Kyoto residency, previously unseen work
  • KG+ satellite festival (free access) for emerging artists
Pixidia tip: Aim for mid-April (18–25 April): the cherry blossoms are still present and the festival has just opened — the double « sakura + photography » experience is unforgettable. The KG+, the satellite festival with free access, often showcases tomorrow’s photographers in less crowded spaces. Allow at least 5 to 7 days to see the essentials.

4. Lee Miller — Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris (MAM)

Visitors in a contemporary art gallery at a photography exhibition
Photo by Blessfield John on Unsplash

The largest French retrospective in twenty years

10 Apr. – 2 Aug. 2026 MAM, 11 av. du Président Wilson, Paris (16th arr.) From €18.70 1h30 to 2h (250 prints)

From 10 April to 2 August 2026, the Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris presents the most significant retrospective devoted to Lee Miller in France in twenty years. Organised at the initiative of Tate Britain and in collaboration with the Art Institute of Chicago, the exhibition brings together nearly 250 vintage and modern prints, including several never shown before. According to MAM Paris, six sections trace the full trajectory of this photographer long relegated to the role of muse.

An essential figure of the international avant-garde, Lee Miller (1907–1977) was by turns a model, Surrealist artist, portraitist, fashion photographer and war correspondent accredited by the US Army. Her photographs of the liberated camps at Buchenwald and Dachau remain among the most powerful images of the Second World War. Today recognised as one of the great photographers of the 20th century, this retrospective finally restores her rightful place in history.

A journey through six chapters

  • Her beginnings in New York: modelling for Vogue and fashion portraits
  • Surrealist Paris: collaboration with Man Ray and the avant-gardes
  • Egypt and the Middle East: the formative journey of the 1930s
  • War correspondent: the liberation witnessed from the inside
Pixidia tip: Thursday until 9:30pm is the ideal late opening for temporary exhibitions — few crowds and subdued lighting that brings out the best in silver gelatin prints. Admission to the museum’s permanent collection is included free with the ticket. Combine with the Nan Goldin retrospective at the Grand Palais, a 10-minute walk away, for a purely photographic day out.

5. Dana Lixenberg — American Images — MEP, Paris

Visitors in front of photographs displayed in a contemporary art gallery
Photo by valentin ciccarone on Unsplash

Thirty years of intimate America in the heart of the Marais

11 Feb. – 24 May 2026 MEP, 5/7 rue de Fourcy, Paris (4th arr.) €13 (full) / €8 (reduced) Thursday late opening until 10pm

Until 24 May 2026, the Maison Européenne de la Photographie presents the first Parisian retrospective devoted to Dutch photographer Dana Lixenberg. Across two floors, more than thirty years of work in the United States unfold a plural portrait of contemporary America. According to Expo Paris, the journey opens with colour portraits made between 1993 and 2003 for American magazines: Whitney Houston, Tupac Shakur, Biggie Smalls, Kate Moss, Jay-Z, Allen Ginsberg and Leonard Cohen in images that have become iconic.

But Dana Lixenberg is also — and above all — known for her fieldwork in invisible communities. Two decades of immersion in Compton (Los Angeles) gave rise to an extraordinary documentary body of work. « Photography is like a slow dance, » she says — a method built on listening, patience and trust built up quietly over time. In France, her name remains largely unknown to the general public, making her one of the most precious discoveries of the season.

Pixidia tip: Thursday evening (late opening until 10pm) is ideal — few visitors and subdued lighting that brings out the large-format prints. The MEP is nestled in the heart of the historic Marais: after your visit, explore the adjacent streets for other lesser-known photography galleries.

6. Festival Photo La Gacilly — Europe’s Largest Open-Air Gallery

Picturesque small French village with a river and stone bridge
Photo by Sies Kranen on Unsplash

Free, immersive and unrivalled

1 Jun. – 4 Oct. 2026 La Gacilly, Morbihan (56), Brittany Entirely free 24/7 (outdoor exhibition)

Founded in 2004, the Festival Photo La Gacilly has become the largest open-air photography festival in Europe, welcoming more than 300,000 visitors each season. For four months, the Breton village is transformed into an open-air gallery. According to the official website, the streets, lanes and gardens become exhibition spaces « fully accessible, at the heart of a living, ever-moving space ». And all of this, entirely free of charge.

Since its founding, the festival has championed environmental and social issues. Each edition develops a dual theme combining a focus on contemporary creation — often a country or continent — with a societal issue. Everything is accessible 24 hours a day, seven days a week, allowing for a particularly poetic nocturnal stroll.

Pixidia tip: Arrive early in the morning (6am–9am) to photograph the works in raking light without the crowds. Combine with a hike in the nearby Brocéliande forest (the Arthurian legends are still very much alive there) for a perfectly culture-meets-nature weekend.

7. Les Rencontres d’Arles 2026 — 57th Edition

Provençal village in the Var, typical landscape of the south of France
Photo by Yvan Haralambidis on Unsplash

The world capital of photography throughout the summer

6 Jul. – 4 Oct. 2026 Arles, Bouches-du-Rhône (13) Multi-exhibition pass from €40 / OFF free 3–4 days minimum recommended

For its 57th edition, the Rencontres d’Arles runs from 6 July to 4 October 2026. The city of Arles is transformed into the world capital of photography for a whole summer. According to JDS.fr, around forty exhibitions are presented in unforgettable heritage venues — chapels, 12th-century cloisters, 19th-century industrial buildings — as well as contemporary and unexpected settings.

The Rencontres paid tribute to Martin Parr, who passed away in December 2025: « His story is closely linked to the Rencontres d’Arles, where his work had a profound impact on several generations of visitors and photographers. » Among the already-announced projects, artist Lara Tabet and curator Yasmine Chemali will present Le corps vitré, selected for the Rencontres 2026 and then Paris Photo in November.

Pixidia tip: Make the most of the Festival OFF — entirely free, often more experimental than the main festival, and less crowded. The first week of July (opening week) offers the most packed programme. Book accommodation 3 to 6 months in advance: Arles is fully booked in July.

8. Visa pour l’Image — Perpignan (38th Edition)

29 Aug. – 13 Sep. 2026 Perpignan, Pyrénées-Orientales Entirely free 38th edition

For its 38th edition, Visa pour l’Image takes place in Perpignan from 29 August to 13 September 2026. The world’s largest international photojournalism festival brings together more than twenty free exhibitions across the city each year, according to Tourisme Occitanie. The Couvent des Minimes, the Église des Dominicains, the medieval Campo Santo — heritage sites are transformed into stages for high-level photojournalism.

The open-air evening screenings in the cloister of the Campo Santo are among the most intense visual experiences imaginable: images of global conflicts projected onto 14th-century stone walls, under the Mediterranean stars. No other festival in the world creates such a powerful collision between art, current affairs and historical memory.

Pixidia tip: Try to attend the Visa d’Or awards ceremony — it is the equivalent of the Oscars for photojournalism. The first week (professional week) is ideal for meeting photo editors and authors. Book accommodation 3 to 4 months in advance: the city is fully booked during opening week.

9. 9th Hamburg Triennial of Photography — Alliance, Infinity, Love

Colourful buildings along a canal in Hamburg, Germany
Photo by Wolfgang Weiser on Unsplash

The great unknown of the European photography scene

5 Jun. – 22 Sep. 2026 Hamburg, Germany (8 museums) ~€25 (day pass) / some venues free 2–3 days recommended

From 5 June to 22 September 2026, the 9th Hamburg Triennial of Photography presents eleven exhibitions across eight major institutions in the city, around the concept Alliance, Infinity, Love – in the Face of the Other. Under the artistic direction of Mark Sealy, a London-based curator who has dedicated his career to decolonising the Western gaze, the Triennial invites exploration of the creative and social potential of alliance, infinity and love in the face of otherness. According to L’Œil de la Photographie, the event is the major photography gathering of the German-speaking world.

The great strength of the Triennial lies in its collaborative approach: Hamburg’s leading photography and art institutions — led by the Deichtorhallen — join forces to create a festival with reach far beyond the city’s borders. Hamburg often remains overshadowed by Berlin on cultural circuits, which makes it a less crowded and more accessible destination.

Pixidia tip: Take the opportunity of your time in Hamburg to explore the independent gallery scene of the Schanzenviertel district, the gateway to the emerging photography scene. The Speicherstadt (Warehouse City, UNESCO-listed) also houses some remarkable photography galleries.

2026 Photo Exhibitions Summary Calendar

Note: According to the French Ministry of Culture, France is celebrating from September 2026 the bicentenary of the birth of photography — which explains the exceptional density of the national programme this year.
Exhibition / FestivalVenueDatesPrice
Martin Parr — Global WarningParis, Jeu de Paume30 Jan. → 24 May~€14
Dana Lixenberg — American ImagesParis, MEP11 Feb. → 24 May€13
Nan Goldin — This Will Not End WellParis, Grand Palais18 Mar. → 21 Jun.~€20–25
Lee MillerParis, MAM10 Apr. → 2 Aug.€18.70
Kyotographie EDGEKyoto, Japan18 Apr. → 17 May~€10–14/exhibition
Festival Photo La GacillyLa Gacilly, Brittany1 Jun. → 4 Oct.Free
Hamburg Photo TriennialHamburg, Germany5 Jun. → 22 Sep.~€25 (pass)
Les Rencontres d’ArlesArles, Provence6 Jul. → 4 Oct.from €40
Visa pour l’ImagePerpignan29 Aug. → 13 Sep.Free

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Frequently asked questions about the 2026 photo exhibitions

Did Martin Parr pass away before the Jeu de Paume exhibition opened?

Yes. Martin Parr passed away on 6 December 2025 in Bristol, at the age of 73. The exhibition Global Warning at the Jeu de Paume (which opened on 30 January 2026) had been entirely conceived and built with him before his death. This retrospective — the most important ever devoted to his work in France — therefore takes on a particularly moving testamentary dimension. It is on display until 24 May 2026.

Can you see several Parisian exhibitions in a single trip?

Absolutely. Paris alone concentrates five major photography exhibitions in 2026. In one well-organised week, it is possible to see Martin Parr at the Jeu de Paume, Nan Goldin at the Grand Palais, Lee Miller at the MAM and Dana Lixenberg at the MEP. All four venues are accessible by public transport from any central arrondissement. Average budget: €60–70 for all admissions combined, not counting Nan Goldin’s free installation at the Salpêtrière.

Is Kyotographie really worth the trip from Europe?

For a photography enthusiast: yes, without hesitation. The dual experience — Kyoto in spring (cherry blossoms) + a world-renowned photography festival in historic temples and palaces — is unique in the world. Paris–Osaka flights can generally be found between €600 and €900 when booked 3 months in advance. The 2026 theme, EDGE, featuring photographers such as Daido Moriyama and Anton Corbijn, is of exceptional quality.

Which photography festivals are entirely free in 2026?

Three major events are entirely free: Visa pour l’Image in Perpignan (exhibitions from 29 August to 13 September), the Festival Photo La Gacilly in Brittany (1 June to 4 October, open 24/7), and the Festival OFF d’Arles (July–October, running parallel to the Rencontres). The part of the Nan Goldin retrospective at the Chapelle de la Salpêtrière (Paris) is also free.

Do you need to book in advance for the Parisian exhibitions?

Online booking is strongly recommended for the Jeu de Paume and the Grand Palais, especially at weekends and during school holidays. For festivals such as Arles, Perpignan and Hamburg, the most urgent priority is to book your accommodation: 3 to 6 months in advance for Arles in July, 2 to 3 months for Perpignan in September.

Is 2026 truly an exceptional year for photography?

Yes, on several counts. According to the French Ministry of Culture, France is celebrating from September 2026 the bicentenary of the birth of photography, which explains the exceptional density of the national programme. Added to this is the particular context of Martin Parr’s death at the end of 2025, which gives several exhibitions an unprecedented memorial dimension. In 2026, failing to engage with photography would mean missing a pivotal moment in the history of art.

Where can you see Daido Moriyama’s work in 2026?

Daido Moriyama is among the artists exhibited at Kyotographie 2026. His retrospective is presented at the Kyoto City KYOCERA Museum of Art, organised by KYOTOGRAPHIE and the Instituto Moreira Salles, in collaboration with the Daido Moriyama Photo Foundation. It is one of the most eagerly awaited highlights of the festival (18 April – 17 May 2026).

Sources

Last updated: 25 March 2026

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