Bibliothèque Kandinsky

The Kandinsky Library (or Bibliothèque Kandinsky in French) is a library of 20th and 21st century visual arts located at the Pompidou Centre in Paris, France. It also serves as the Documentation and Research Centre of the French National Museum of Modern Art (Musée national d'art moderne / Centre de création industrielle, or MNAM / CCI).

It is named after the Russian painter and art theorist Wassily Kandinsky, a pioneer in abstract art and a leading figure in early 20th century visual arts.

Collections

Created in 2002, the Kandinsky Library includes over 200,000 works (art books, art journals, photographs, audio recordings, videos, artists' archives, etc.) from about 5,000 artists, designers, and architects.[1] A large fraction of these collections come from the former Centre national d'art contemporain (CNAC). Since the acquisition of the Paul Destribats collection in 2006,[2] the Kandinsky Library is one of the larger visual art collections in the world for the first half of the 20th century.

Notes

gollark: Monads are in fact unfathomable to mortals.
gollark: Oh, or rewrite it in Haskell and use as many monads as possible.
gollark: Well, you could make it more annoying by having your code execute entirely out of order.
gollark: This is not really, as far as I know, practical for machine-code-y systems, because they don't need to go through a function call or whatever to load new code for execution.
gollark: What I had to do one time to reverse some obfuscated code on potatOS was hook `load` to log newly loaded code to a file, it's called "Protocol Epsilon debug mode" and is still in there.

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