Paris Photo 2024

7 - 10 Nov 2024

Paris Photo returns to the Grand Palais in 2024 following a major restoration.

For its 27th edition, the fair writes a new chapter in its history in this iconic venue and continues its mission: to host the best international and French galleries while giving essential prominence to emerging artists and photography books.

With a rich and challenging program, Paris Photo presents a project that reflects the strong connection it has with museums worldwide and explores new territories. Institutional exhibitions, roundtable discussions, performances, educational projects, and image education initiatives unfold during the fair.

This year, Paris Photo is pleased to announce the participation of 234 exhibitors in its 27th edition, returning to the iconic, newly-renovated Grand Palais. The fair will feature 191 galleries and 43 publishers from 33 countries, with 64 first-time participants. With the newly curated sector, Voices, the expansion of Digital and Emergence sectors, the coming of new contemporary book publishers and the return of antiquarian books, Paris Photo offers a broader range of artistic projects exploring the boundaries of the medium.

We’re excited to share the work of Haji Oh at this year’s fair.

‘Grand-Mother Island Project’, is an immersive installation by Haji Oh, winner of the Tokyo Contemporary Art Award 2024.
Employing cyanotype, photography and hand-woven textiles, Oh reframes traditional materials and methods, imbuing her artworks with memory, place, and identity.
Her practice distils her upbringing as a third-generation Zainichi Korean raised in Japan, migrating to Australia in 2014, and draws on her family’s relocation from Jeju Island to Japan in 1930.
Her work shifts seamlessly between the personal and global, memories of ancestors are reimagined and carried into the future. She reflects on the importance of intergenerational storytelling as a means of interpreting history. Through her labour-intensive processes of weaving, unravelling, and printing, Oh explores the three-dimensional space of memory.