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Galerie Bernard Dulon

For over thirty years, the Bernard Dulon Gallery has devoted most of its activities to showcasing art from the golden ages of tribal societies.

Since September 2002, the gallery has regularly organized major exhibitions, accompanied by reference catalogs, at its space on Rue Jacques Callot in Paris.

This new space was first inaugurated with the exhibition Arman l’Africain in 2002, followed by West Dreams, Art of West Africa in 2003, Thila, Lobi Statuary from the Ferrari Collection in 2004, Art of Cameroon in 2006 and 2013, Kota Ancestors in 2011 (Paris and New York), Tsogho: Icons of Bwiti in 2016, A Dan Mask and More… in 2018. Bernard Dulon is an Expert at the Paris Court of Appeal and a member of the Compagnie Nationale des Experts. He has also curated major exhibitions for museums. As such, he is a renowned expert, a member of the Compagnie Nationale des Experts since 1985, and since 2016 an Expert at the Paris Court of Appeal, specializing in ancient arts from Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. Bernard Dulon became known to the general public as a curator of exhibitions that were, in their time, praised by the national and international press, notably for Lumière Noire at the Château de Tanlay in 1997, for the Iber Caja Foundation in Zaragoza in 2010, and Carnets de Voyage, in collaboration with the Tervuren Museum in Belgium, for the Jacques Chirac Museum in 2010.

The gallery also participates in major art fairs such as Parcours des Mondes in Paris, as well as TEFAF in Maastricht and New York.