The suburbs influence Paris, Paris influences the world. Often criticised and stigmatised today, the spotlight is turning towards working-class neighbourhoods.
The suburbs have become gentrified, and the exhibition highlights the suburbs’ view of themselves. Working-class neighbourhoods are now ‘in vogue’ because they represent a unique blend of creativity, authenticity and cultural diversity. Long stigmatised, they are now valued in fashion, music, cinema, design and gastronomy.
The popularisation of working-class neighbourhoods
This trend is driven by talented individuals who have emerged from these neighbourhoods, such as Jamel Debbouze and Omar Sy. Cultural reappropriation by the residents themselves, with groups such as NTM and 113 (streetwear, rap, urban art). Brands and the media are promoting these neighbourhoods, drawing on their raw, sincere and vibrant imagery and their desire for alternatives to the smoother, more institutional mainstream culture.
The Darling Suburbs exhibition offers a fresh and sensitive look at the urban periphery, rich in stories, visuals and questions. It provides a better understanding of the social dynamics, urban history and plural identity of these areas, which are too often misunderstood. The exhibition has been praised for its ‘polyphonic’ approach, inviting visitors to perceive the suburbs as living places where memory and creativity intertwine.
The goal and purpose of the exhibition
To deconstruct clichés about suburbs and show their diversity, richness, and history. To put suburbs back into the urban, political, and cultural history of France. An artistic, historical, and social immersion into French suburbs, from the late 19th century to today. More than 200 varied pieces combining archives, paintings, photographs, installations, videos and testimonies, such as the collapse of the 4,000 in La Courneuve.
Our opinion on various themes of the Darling Suburbs exhibition
The Darling Suburbs exhibition immerses us in an artistic journey through the history of the suburbs in its entirety, from the 19th century to the present day. We discover its many facets, as the suburbs have many strings to their bow: committed, focused, gentle, bitter, but above all vibrant and talented. It is the ideal exhibition if you like places that address political and social issues from the past to the present day.
The exhibition: Palais de la Porte Dorée (12th arrondissement of Paris) until 17 August 2025, Tuesday to Friday from 10am to 5.30pm, Saturday/Sunday from 10am to 7pm.
Admission: €12, reduced rate €9, free for under-26s and on the first Sunday of the month.
Address: 293 avenue Daumesnil, 75012 Paris (Porte Dorée underground/tram stop).
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