Exhibition celebrates the many facets of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's extraordinary life
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Exhibition celebrates the many facets of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's extraordinary life
Installation view. © MAD, Paris - Christophe Dellière.



PARIS.- The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris presents the first major museum exhibition in France dedicated to the timeless literary masterpiece, The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry.

This exhibition, entitled À la rencontre du petit prince (An Encounter with the petit prince), brings together more than six-hundred works that celebrate the many facets of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’s extraordinary life as a writer, poet, aviator, explorer, journalist, inventor, and philosopher who was driven all his life by a humanistic ideal, the true driving force of his work.

An Encounter with the petit prince showcases the original manuscript of The Little Prince, held in the permanent collection of the Morgan Library & Museum in New York City, alongside watercolors, sketches, drawings, papers, photographs, poems, newspaper clippings and correspondence produced by Saint-Exupéry over the course of his life.

Written and published in the United States in 1943 and in France in 1946 only, The Little Prince was the final work of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, published during his lifetime and undoubtedly his most prolific, sharing with readers a universal message while transcending borders and time.

The exhibition scenography was entrusted to Designers Unit.

This timeless story, punctuated by whimsical, poetic illustrations, has become a staple of children’s literature while also presenting a message of considerable philosophical scope. Through the clues dispersed throughout the texts, drawings and artifacts presented, An Encounter with the petit prince sheds light onto often overlooked or unknown aspects of Saint-Exupéry’s life while offering a more profound understanding of this internationally recognized and enigmatic story.

Heralded as a pioneer of aviation, Antoine de Saint-Exupéry quickly became a renowned writer. His first novel, Southern Mail, published in 1929, became an immediate success, while his second, Night Flight, published in 1931, won the author the Prix Femina award, a major French literary prize. Saint-Exupéry then partook in both air raids and promotional tours with Air France and wrote engaged pieces about the situations in Spain and in the Soviet Union.

This hectic decade in the life of the author is recounted in his autobiographical work, Wind, Sand and Stars, which was published on the eve of the Second World War and constitutes a lasting testament to the author’s entrenched humanism. The Little Prince was written during Saint-Exupéry’s exile in the United States, where it was published in French and English in 1943. Only in 1946 was it published, posthumously, in Saint-Exupéry’s homeland.




An Encounter with the petit prince traces the life of the author, beginning with his birth on June 29th, 1900 and his aristocratic origins in Lyon, followed by his upbringing and education, his interest in poetry, and his fascination with airplanes, all of which influenced his writings.

The exhibition continues with Saint-Exupéry’s enlistment in the French Air Force in 1921 before joining Aéropostale, a French air courier service, where Saint-Exupéry flew the Casablanca–Dakar route in 1926 and later managed the Cape Juby station in Sahara between 1927 and 1928. In 1929, Saint-Exupéry served as director of Aeroposta Argentina. All three experiences would go on to inspire his first two works, Southern Mail (1929) and Night Flight (1931).

The exhibition then reflects on the impact of the airplane crash suffered by Saint-Exupéry and his mechanic, André Prévost, on a Saigon–Paris route in December 1935. This episode played a central role in the narrative of Wind, Sand and Stars and served as the opening scene of The Little Prince.

The fourth segment of the exhibition explores the fundamental importance of drawing in the life of the author as a means of reconnecting with his childhood. In fact, it is through this artistic medium that the petit prince and the Aviator are acquainted: “If you please — draw me a sheep.

The collection of drawings brought together in An Encounter with the petit prince further bears witness to the author’s many talents, showcasing many letters, drafts, notebooks, and manuscripts adorned with drawings by Saint-Exupéry.

The exhibition goes on to highlight two major figures in the life of Saint-Exupéry from his time in the United States — he goes into exile in 1940 in an attempt to convince the U.S. government to enter the war alongside France. This includes his wife, Consuelo, who inspired the flower, as well as his dear friend, Léon Werth. Werth, a fervent opponent of colonialism and militarism, is Saint-Exupéry’s literary mentor and closest friend and the one Saint-Exupéry dedicated The Little Prince to.

An entire room of the exhibition is dedicated to the highlight of the exhibition: the original manuscript of The Little Prince, kept in the Morgan Library & Museum in New York City and presented for the first time ever in France at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs. This exceptional loan is complemented by numerous unpublished original works from another private collection which have never before been shown to the public.

Finally, the posthumous life of the Petit Prince is explored, with the prince serving as the literary double who survives long after the death of the author. The disappearance of Saint-Exupéry, who died serving in the Free French Air Forces on July 31st, 1944, only helped to sanctify the Petit Prince. The exhibition ends with a ‘universal library’ that presents one hundred twenty foreign editions of his most recognized work, which has since been translated into nearly five hundred languages.

With An Encounter with the petit prince, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs continues its children’s literature exhibition cycle, initiated with Une Histoire, Encore ! 50 ans de création à l’école des loisirs in 2016 and Les Drôles de Petites Bêtes d’Antoon Krings in 2019. Children, adults and their inner children are all invited to share in the humanistic message of hope brought to us by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry and his friend, the petit prince.










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