ParisPont Neuf art installation in Paris by JR

Pont Neuf art installation in Paris by JR

The huge temporary art installation on Pont Neuf by JR in Paris, called La Caverne du Pont-Neuf.

JR transforms the city’s oldest bridge into what looks like a gigantic rocky cave using an inflatable trompe-l’œil structure. The work is both an immersive artwork and a tribute to Christo and Jeanne-Claude, whose famous 1985 project The Pont Neuf Wrapped covered the same bridge in fabric.  

At first glance, it looks like a giant playful stunt—turning the elegant Pont Neuf into a fake rocky cave. But JR is layering several ideas on top of each other:

Reality vs illusion

The “cave” is completely artificial—printed fabric stretched over a structure—yet it feels almost real when you walk through it.

That connects directly to Plato’s Allegory of the Cave: humans mistake shadows for reality, what we see isn’t always truth (social media, screens, and images constantly shape what we think is “real.”).

Rewriting a historic monument

The Pont Neuf is the oldest bridge in Paris – symbol of permanence, history, stability. JR temporarily turns it into something: unstable, theatrical, almost fake.

That tension is the point: even the most “solid” things (history, identity, cities) can be reinterpreted.

The installation is about 120 meters long and up to 18 meters high. 

ft/ Kate Zaniewska

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