Home / Arts and Entertainment / Martin Parr's Final Show: A Darker Humor
Martin Parr's Final Show: A Darker Humor
20 Apr
Summary
- Martin Parr's final exhibition, 'Global Warning', explores everyday absurdity with darker undertones.
- The show highlights Parr's unique observational superpower, often unnoticed by his subjects.
- Exhibition captures tourism's darker side, wealth gaps, and consumption's impact on Earth.

Martin Parr's posthumous exhibition, 'Global Warning,' at Paris's Jeu de Paume offers a poignant final chapter from the celebrated photographer. The show, anticipated to be the museum's most visited, reveals Parr's distinctive ability to capture everyday absurdities with an irresistible, albeit darkening, good humor. His unique observational superpower allowed him to photograph subjects candidly, often appearing like an unobtrusive birdwatcher.
The exhibition delves into Parr's recurring theme of tourism, evolving from early British seaside scenes to the starker realities of destinations like Bali and Gambia. Here, the wealth and power gap between tourists and locals is clearly depicted, moving beyond humor to a more accusatory tone. Images of consumption, from shopping malls to displays of weaponry, underscore Parr's complicity as a participant in the culture he documented.
'Global Warning' culminates with a stark reflection on societal predicaments, where simulations of life and rampant consumption lead to a planet, metaphorically represented by a deflating beach ball, succumbing to the heat. Parr's unflinching acceptance of the world he observed, without attempting to change it, makes this exhibition a clear and edifying testament to his photographic genius.