Ideally located between Aix-en-Provence and the Luberon National Park, Château La Coste is a vineyard where wine, art, and architecture coexist in harmony. Alongside the cypress, umbrella pine, olive, and centuries-old oak trees that populate the estate's 200 hectares, the site hosts unique exhibitions, such as those dedicated to Adam Fuss, Callum Innes, Ziping Wang, and Dennis Miranda Zamorano!

Adam Fuss, "Ark"
Until January 4, 2026, an immersive installation spread across two galleries creates a dialogue between works by Adam Fuss and vintage photographs from his personal collection. Château La Coste has chosen to highlight a series of photographs taken in 1987 from a single drop of water. Known for developing unconventional photographic techniques without a camera, Adam Fuss creates his images from the direct interaction between light and photosensitive paper. This is a way of distilling the natural world to extract its symbolic essence and reveal its full spiritual energy.

Callum Innes, "Overleaf"
Callum Innes is undoubtedly one of the most important abstract painters of his generation. The reason? His unique pictorial language in which the act of erasure using turpentine washes is as essential as the application of paint. This process of creation and destruction produces a fragile balance, a visual and material tension that defines the very essence of his work. The paintings in the series Resonance On display until December 7th, these works further extend this reflection. Here, color is carefully removed and then reapplied to reveal subtle changes on the canvas. Constantly oscillating between presence and absence, the surfaces of his works lend themselves particularly well to the interplay of natural light in the Renzo Piano Pavilion. Hold your breath, Callum Innes's paintings are about to enter your lives…


Ziping Wang, “Chromatic Crumble!” »
Until January 25, Ziping Wang takes over the Richard Rogers Gallery, a glass structure suspended eighteen meters above the vineyards. In this space with its elongated architecture, her works find the ideal setting to reveal the elusive nature of altered reality. A central theme in the Chinese artist's work is the way our perception of the world is constantly bombarded by brightly colored advertisements and other catchy slogans, an inexhaustible source of inspiration. Her vibrant, collage-like paintings blend food packaging, caricatured representations of food, traditional Chinese and Japanese decorative motifs, still lifes by old masters, and geometric forms in a unique visual language. And one that is undeniably harmonious!


Blue from the untamed bird_200cmx150cm_Oil on Canvas_2024
Dennis Miranda Zamorano, “I am the Landscape”
A real gem: the work of Mexican artist Dennis Miranda Zamorano, on display at the Oscar Niemeyer Auditorium until January 25th! This self-taught artist unveils a new series of large-format works that unfold like portals, drawing viewers into a mythical journey through memory, ritual, and the unconscious. Indeed, Zamorano's work constantly explores a multitude of material and conceptual approaches, resulting in unexpected representations of the human form and reflections on the human condition. His canvases navigate fluidly between representation and image, figuration and abstraction. Dozens of layers of paint—house paint, oil, acrylic, and watercolor—are scraped, sanded, chiseled, grooved, pressure-washed, chemically dissolved, or exposed to the elements. Dreamlike, tactile and intensely chromatic, the resulting paintings oscillate between the very essence of being (an encounter, an object or a memory) and its representation, reflecting the fragmented and fragile nature of the human condition.


Dennis Miranda Zamorano, Green with Tripofobia
Château La Coste
2750, Route de la Cride, Le Puy-Sainte-Réparade







