Rococo & co: From Nicolas Pineau to Cindy Sherman

from 12 March to 18 May 2025

On the occasion of the Dessin 2025 fair, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs is paying tribute to Nicolas Pineau, an ornamental sculptor and architect, one of the major figures of the artistic renewal at the beginning of the 18th century.

From its origins at the beginning of the 18th century, the exhibition explores the evolution of the Rococo style and its reappearance in contemporary design and fashion, including Art Nouveau and psychedelic art. Nearly 200 drawings, pieces of furniture, woodwork, objets d’art, lighting, ceramics and fashion items engage in a playful dialogue of curves and counter-curves. Nicolas Pineau and Juste Aurèle Meissonnier are joined by Louis Majorelle, Jean Royère, Alessandro Mendini, Mathieu Lehanneur, the fashion designers Tan Giudicelli and Vivienne Westwood, and the artist Cindy Sherman.

Information

Musée des Arts Décoratifs
107, rue de Rivoli
75001 Paris
France
Phone: +33 (0)1 44 55 57 50


• Access
• Opening Hours and Admission Fees


#Expo_Rococo

Download the brochure for the exhibition “Rococo & co. From Nicolas Pineau to Cindy Sherman”
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Curator

• Bénédicte Gady, curator in charge of collections of drawings, wallpapers and photographs.
• Assisted by Turner Edwards, Ph.D. and François Gilles, Ph.D.

Présentation

This exhibition celebrates the restoration of a unique collection of nearly 500 drawings from the workshop of the sculptor Nicolas Pineau (1684-1754), one of the main proponents of the Rocaille style, which Europe adopted as Rococo. A practitioner of measured asymmetry and a subtle interplay of solids and voids, Nicolas Pineau excelled in many fields: woodwork, ornamental sculpture, architecture, prints, furniture and silverware. The presentation of this major Rococo figure is extended to include a workshop that plunges the visitor into the heart of the creation of Rococo panelling. Asymmetries, sinuous lines, chinoiserie dreams and animal images illustrate the infinite variations of the Rococo style. Finally, from the 19th to the 21st century, this aesthetic has found numerous echoes, from neo-styles to the most unexpected and playful reinterpretations.

A figure of the Rococo: Nicolas Pineau, between Paris and Saint Petersburg

Tan Giudicelli — {Commode Dress} 1988 Gazar
Tan Giudicelli — Commode Dress 1988 Gazar
Lamé appliqué embroidery and glass tubes
© Les Arts Décoratifs / Christophe Dellière

First known for his engravings, Nicolas Pineau was called to Russia in 1716, where he became first sculptor and then first architect to Peter the Great. He designed numerous projects for the Tsar, including decorations, gardens, monuments and buildings, and took an active part in the great building projects that transformed Saint Petersburg into the capital of a new empire and Peterhof into a new Versailles. On his return to Paris in 1728, Pineau wanted to continue his career as an architect, but it was as a sculptor that he excelled and stood out among his contemporaries. He worked primarily for the Parisian nobility and for Louis XV, while continuing to send his models to Germany and Russia and to publish. His work, consisting mainly of façade sculptures and woodcarvings, was largely destroyed with the advent of neoclassicism. However, remnants can still be seen in the streets of old Paris, testifying to the elegance of his art.

Mathieu Lehanneur - Coat rack 2003-2009
Mathieu Lehanneur - Coat rack 2003-2009
Cold bendable wood
© Les Arts Décoratifs / Christophe Dellière

Making decorations: Inside the workshop of a wood sculptor

The drawings presented in the exhibition come from the collection of Nicolas Pineau’s workshop, which was kept by his descendants until the end of the 19th century. A large part of this collection was then acquired by the Union Centrale des Arts Décoratifs (the predecessor of the Musée des Arts Décoratifs). These drawings, of a very wide typological range, provide an exceptional insight into the design and production of decorative arts under the Ancien Régime. Their juxtaposition with the works of Nicolas Pineau reveals the complexity of the creative processes themselves.

One room of the exhibition is dedicated to these workshop practices. Using a model by Nicolas Pineau, the sculptor François Gilles re-creates the stages of woodworking and presents three phases of this sculptural work. Videos and tools explain the technical means used in the 18th century.

Jules Cron, Manufacture Jules Desfossé — Repetitive pattern wallpaper, 1859
Jules Cron, Manufacture Jules Desfossé — Repetitive pattern wallpaper, 1859
Paper, velvety hand-brushed green background
© Les Arts Décoratifs / Christophe Dellière

Shapes of the Rococo

Asymmetry, sinuous lines, infinite variations, chinoiserie dreams, animal imagery: Nicolas Pineau, like his contemporaries and successors, created an art full of fantasy, surprise and abundance, inspired by nature and classical architecture, which he transfigured. While Pineau developed a unique formal vocabulary, the revolution of this taste for curves, excess, hybridization and whimsy spread, according to some, to all the arts and throughout Europe.

Jennens & Bettridge (Birmingham) - Armchair Circa 1850-1865
Jennens & Bettridge (Birmingham) - Armchair Circa 1850-1865
Painted and gilded wood
© Les Arts Décoratifs / Christophe Dellière

Echoes of the Rococo

The Rococo period marked a turning point in the history of decorative arts, the echoes of which can still be heard today. The contradictory perception of this style, between passion and rejection, leads to an exploration of the historicism of the 19th century, the sources of Art Nouveau and those of Postmodernism. The forms of the Rococo conceal, develop, hybridise and are constantly reinvented. This freedom of form and inventiveness appears as a challenge to taste and logic. The whiplash line of a Majorelle resonates with the asymmetrical curves of creations by Mathieu Lehanneur or Pierre Renart. Vivienne Westwood, like Cindy Sherman, plays with rococo preciousness, as does Tan Giudicelli, who decorates a dress like a rococo chest of drawers. For Royère, nature reclaims its rights: the decorator transforms light fittings into vines. The juxtaposition of Neo- or Post-Rococo objects with the work of one of the main proponents of this aesthetic, Nicolas Pineau, raises the question of the permanence and success of a “taste” that seems to have no end.

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