1889 to the present

When Paris became a machine for modern imagination

Cabaret light, cafe argument, jazz rhythm, cheap rooms, radical galleries, and the shock of war made Paris a meeting place where artists learned to remix the century.

Montmartre cabarets Lost Generation prose Gershwin's city music Modern film spectacle

Paris was not a single movement. It was a pressure chamber.

The city drew performers, painters, writers, composers, publishers, dancers, Black American musicians, Russian emigres, wealthy patrons, and broke young experimenters into the same streets. The result was not one renaissance but a series of overlapping awakenings: Belle Epoque spectacle in Montmartre, postwar literary exile in Montparnasse, School of Paris painting, jazz-age nightlife, and a cinematic afterlife that still shapes how we imagine art, romance, and urban freedom.

An American in Paris: the flaneur with a brass section

Gershwin's piece is not simply about Paris. It is about perception: an American body moving through a European capital, registering horns, stride, glamour, homesickness, blues, and delight. Its genius is cultural translation. The symphony hall admits taxi noise; jazz harmony enters concert form; the tourist becomes an artist by listening.

Explore the Gershwin archive

Four eras, one atmosphere

  1. Moulin Rouge opens

    The cabaret turns Montmartre into a theater of mixed classes, commercial spectacle, and erotic modernity. The Belle Epoque learns to sell itself in color.

  2. The city becomes a laboratory

    Cubism, ballet, fashion, cafe debate, and new print culture make Paris a magnet for people who want old forms to break open.

  3. The expatriate decade

    Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Zelda Fitzgerald, Sylvia Beach, Djuna Barnes, Ezra Pound, and others use Paris as a studio for alienation, compression, experiment, and reinvention.

  4. Jazz crosses the Atlantic

    Black American performers and musicians help redefine Parisian nightlife. Josephine Baker's arrival in 1925 makes movement, celebrity, race, fashion, and modernity inseparable on the European stage.

  5. Gershwin scores the city

    An American in Paris premieres at Carnegie Hall on December 13, 1928, bringing a Parisian walk into American concert life.

  6. Paris becomes cinema memory

    MGM's An American in Paris and Baz Luhrmann's Moulin Rouge! turn earlier Paris into saturated dance, design, color, and myth for global audiences.

Who came to Paris, and what did it do to them?

Ernest Hemingway

Paris sharpened his prose toward compression, appetite, surfaces, and silence.

Gertrude Stein

Her salon made conversation itself an engine of modernism, linking writers and painters.

Sylvia Beach

Shakespeare and Company became a nerve center for English-language experiment.

F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald

Their Paris glitters and fractures, feeding the mythology of glamour under stress.

Josephine Baker

Her stage presence changed European ideas about modern performance, celebrity, and Black American style.

George Gershwin

He made the city audible as rhythm, machinery, blues, and cosmopolitan pleasure.

What we inherited

01

The modern cafe as studio

Today's coworking tables, literary festivals, and creative districts descend from the idea that public social space can incubate private work.

02

High and low art collapsing

Gershwin and cabaret culture helped normalize the traffic between street sound, popular entertainment, classical form, and elite institutions.

03

The artist as expatriate brand

Paris helped define the romantic modern image of the artist abroad: observant, wounded, disciplined, socially connected, and slightly theatrical.

04

Design as atmosphere

From Toulouse-Lautrec to Luhrmann, Paris teaches that color, typography, costume, lighting, and music can fuse into a total experience.

A guided shelf for going deeper

Library of Congress Gershwin Collection Britannica: Lost Generation The Met: Moulin Rouge: La Goulue Art Institute of Chicago: At the Moulin Rouge AFI Catalog: Moulin Rouge!