Friday, May 22, 2026

Côte d'Azur After Dark: The Best Places to Experience Night of Museums 2026

 

There are few evenings on the European cultural calendar quite like the European Night of Museums. For one weekend each May, museums abandon their usual daytime formality in favour of torchlit corridors, candlelit gardens, immersive performances, and midnight discoveries.

On Friday 22nd and Saturday 23rd May 2026, more than 3,000 institutions across Europe — including over 1,300 in France — will open their doors late into the night, most with free admission.

Started in 2005 from the evolution of Germany’s Long Night of the Museums and France’s Printemps des Musées, the event has become less about passive observation and more about atmosphere, theatre, and rediscovery. Along the French Riviera and in Monaco, this year’s programme is particularly strong, blending art, archaeology, music, astronomy, and gastronomy into one extraordinary weekend.

Here is where the experience truly comes alive.

Monaco: Torchlight Through Prehistory

The Principality begins its celebrations a night early with one of the weekend’s most atmospheric events. On Friday 22nd May, the Museum of Prehistoric Anthropology of Monaco hosts an exclusive after-hours “nocturne” from 8pm to 9pm.

Visitors will navigate the collections entirely by torchlight, transforming the museum into something far more primal and immersive than a traditional gallery visit. The evening also offers rare behind-the-scenes access to scientific laboratories and research collections normally closed to the public. An interactive fire-lighting workshop adds another layer of historical immersion, reconnecting guests with the gestures and survival techniques of early humanity.

Capacity is intentionally limited, making advance booking essential.

Nice: Contemporary Art, Mythology and Cosmic Escape Games

Nice once again delivers one of the Riviera’s most ambitious programmes, mixing avant-garde art with historic spectacle.

Villa Arson & MAMAC

For those seeking a contemporary edge, Villa Arson and the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MAMAC) collaborate on 1 ado – 1 œuvre (“One Teen – One Work”), an unusual performative experience where local adolescents guide visitors through selected video installations and artistic dialogues inside Villa Arson’s maze-like architecture.

Espace Culturel Lympia

At the port, Espace Culturel Lympia presents guided evening visits of Lilette et Gilbert Valentin — Quand la terre devient lumière, offering a more refined and contemplative atmosphere overlooking the harbour.

Musée Matisse

The Musée Matisse opens its permanent collection for special nocturnal tours featuring works donated directly by Henri Matisse and his family from the artist’s own studio — an intimate glimpse into one of France’s greatest artistic legacies.

Palais Lascaris

Music and mythology merge at Palais Lascaris, where artist Aliénor De Georges performs Le Chant des Métamorphoses, reinterpreting Ovid’s ancient tales through electric harp, experimental vocals, and contemporary storytelling.

Côte d’Azur Observatory

Meanwhile, the Côte d’Azur Observatory leans fully into science fiction. Beneath the Great Dome, visitors participate in The Signal, an immersive escape-game scenario involving alien detection, infiltration protocols, and strategic crisis management.

Saint-Jean-Cap-Ferrat: Candlelit Elegance at Villa Ephrussi

Few Riviera locations are better suited to nocturnal spectacle than Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild. For Night of Museums 2026, the villa’s famed gardens and salons will be illuminated by lantern and candlelight, creating one of the weekend’s most cinematic settings.

Guests can wander through the collections after dark before continuing the evening with a specially curated dinner by Chef Myriam Barda at the villa’s restaurant, Béatrice.

Vallauris: Picasso in Complete Darkness

One of the most striking experiences of the weekend takes place at the Musée Magnelli and the chapel of the Château de Vallauris.

Visitors will encounter Pablo Picasso’s monumental La Guerre et la Paix not under gallery lighting, but in near-total darkness, guided only by handheld torches. The effect dramatically reshapes the emotional weight of the paintings, amplifying their themes of violence, fear, and peace.

Earlier in the evening, families can take part in a ceramic-modelling workshop inspired by Picasso’s enduring peace symbolism.

Le Cannet: Bonnard Through Scent and Mystery

At the Musée Bonnard in Le Cannet, the evening becomes deeply sensory.

Visitors are invited into a poetic exploration pairing Pierre Bonnard’s luminous Mediterranean paintings with the fragrances of the Midi, creating a multi-sensory immersion into colour, atmosphere, and memory. Later, the museum shifts tone entirely with a late-night escape game built around hidden clues concealed within Bonnard’s works.

Antibes: Archaeology and Illustrated Classics

Antibes offers two very different but equally engaging experiences.

Musée d’Archéologie

History enthusiasts can attend L’Actu Archéo, an exclusive presentation of newly restored discoveries from the Saint-Esprit Chapel excavations, including medieval ceramics and charcoal remains shedding light on the town’s hidden past.

Musée Peynet et du Dessin d’Humour

Families, meanwhile, can rediscover La Chèvre de Monsieur Seguin through the whimsical illustrations of Raymond Peynet before participating in a collaborative sketch workshop inspired by Alphonse Daudet’s beloved story.

Cannes: Students Become Curators

At Cannes’ Musée des explorations du monde (MEM), students from École Croisette temporarily take control of the galleries as part of the national La Classe, l’œuvre initiative.

The result is a fresh and surprisingly engaging perspective on the museum’s collections, with young participants presenting iconic artefacts through their own interpretations and narratives.

Villeneuve-Loubet: Baroque Arias in a Culinary Museum

The Musée Escoffier de l’art culinaire offers one of the weekend’s most unusual combinations: gastronomy and Baroque opera.

Baritone Jean-François Courbebaisse will perform a programme dedicated to Italian Baroque composers including Caccini and Carissimi, bringing an unexpectedly dramatic soundtrack to the culinary museum’s historic setting.

A Cultural Tradition That Continues to Evolve

What makes the European Night of Museums remarkable is not simply the free admission or extended hours. It is the transformation itself. Museums become theatrical spaces. Historic buildings feel alive. Familiar collections suddenly appear unfamiliar beneath lantern light, candle glow, or midnight silence.

Whether you spend the evening tracing prehistoric rituals in Monaco, wandering candlelit gardens on Cap-Ferrat, or confronting Picasso’s anti-war masterpieces in darkness, Night of Museums 2026 promises far more than a standard gallery visit.

It is Europe’s cultural heritage at its most atmospheric — and for one weekend only, the night belongs to the museums.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Monaco Grand Prix 2026: Four Days of Speed, Glamour and Pure Chaos Take Over the Principality

 

The streets of Monte-Carlo are preparing once again for the world’s most iconic motorsport spectacle. From Thursday 4 June to Sunday 7 June, the Formula 1 Monaco Grand Prix 2026 returns to transform the Principality into a roaring theatre of speed, celebrity, luxury and relentless adrenaline.

Arriving slightly later than its traditional May date, this year’s race weekend promises blazing Mediterranean sunshine, packed terraces, superyachts lining the harbour, and one of the fiercest title battles Formula 1 has seen in years. For four unforgettable days, Monaco will become the absolute centre of the sporting world.

Unlike every other Formula 1 weekend on the calendar, Monaco does things differently. The engines fire up on Thursday, when Formula 2, Formula 3 and the Porsche Mobil 1 Supercup launch the action across the tight and unforgiving street circuit. These early sessions offer fans the chance to witness the sport’s next generation attack barriers that leave absolutely no room for mistakes.

By Friday, Formula 1 takes command of the Principality. The first two practice sessions begin at 1:30pm and 5pm, giving teams their first real opportunity to tame the legendary streets of Monte-Carlo. Every corner matters here. Every centimetre matters. Monaco is not simply a race — it is survival at nearly 300 kilometres per hour between walls.

Saturday delivers the moment many fans consider more important than the race itself: Qualifying. After a final practice session at 12:30pm, the battle for pole position erupts at 4pm in what is routinely one of the most intense hours in global sport. On a circuit where overtaking borders on impossible, securing pole can mean securing victory. One error, one lock-up, one brush with the barrier can destroy an entire weekend instantly.

Then comes Sunday.

At precisely 3pm on 7 June, twenty drivers will launch into a brutal 78-lap fight through the most famous streets in motorsport. From Sainte Dévote to Casino Square, through the tunnel and around the harbour, Monaco remains Formula 1’s ultimate test of nerve, concentration and precision.

Beyond the circuit itself, the entire Principality transforms into a giant open-air festival. Fans without grandstand access can still immerse themselves in the atmosphere at the MGP Live Fan Zone at Place d’Armes in La Condamine.

Running throughout the weekend, the zone offers giant live screens, concerts, driver appearances, official merchandise and Formula 1 simulators that place visitors directly into the action. It remains one of the best ways to experience the energy of the Grand Prix without spending thousands on hospitality terraces or yacht decks.

The 2026 season arrives in Monaco already overflowing with storylines. Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team currently leads the championship fight, powered by teenage sensation Kimi Antonelli, whose remarkable streak of victories has sent shockwaves through the paddock. Teammate George Russell remains close behind, creating growing tension inside Mercedes itself.

But Monaco’s spotlight inevitably falls on hometown hero Charles Leclerc. After finally capturing his emotional home victory in 2024, Leclerc now faces immense pressure to repeat the feat in front of his own streets, his own fans and his own nation. Standing in his way are defending Monaco winner Lando Norris, reigning superstar Max Verstappen, and the highly anticipated Monaco appearances of newcomers Audi and Cadillac.

For those still hoping to attend, opportunities are rapidly disappearing. Limited tickets remain available through the official organisers, with Thursday access starting at €30 and free entry for children under 16 accompanied by an adult. Friday Formula 1 grandstand tickets currently begin around €175, with reduced pricing available for younger spectators.

Additional information and ticket bookings are available through the official Monaco Grand Prix website or directly at the Official Ticket Office on Rue Grimaldi.

One thing is certain: when Formula 1 arrives in Monaco, the world watches.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Fifteen Years of Pride, Resistance, and Community: The Côte d’Azur LGBTQIA+ Center Celebrates a Milestone in Nice

 

For fifteen years, the Côte d’Azur LGBTQIA+ Center has stood as a place of refuge, visibility, advocacy, and connection for countless people across the French Riviera.

Through moments of celebration and moments of struggle, the center has continued to support LGBTQIA+ individuals facing discrimination, rejection, isolation, and violence — while helping build a stronger, more inclusive community along the Côte d’Azur.
Now, that journey reaches a major milestone.

On Friday, May 29, 2026, the center will celebrate its 15th anniversary with an unforgettable evening in Nice — a vibrant event bringing together drag artists, activists, local organizations, allies, and community members for a night dedicated to pride, resilience, and unity.

Hosted at Galerie Neo by VogelARTLab, the celebration promises to be both socially conscious and unapologetically festive. Guests can expect an exceptional drag show featuring artists from diverse backgrounds and artistic worlds, creating an atmosphere where performance becomes both celebration and statement.

The evening will be hosted by the dazzling Lou Lou de la Prothèse and Avila, with additional performers still to be announced. Organizers are already teasing a “next-level” lineup, hinting at a show designed not only to entertain, but to celebrate the richness, creativity, and power of LGBTQIA+ expression.

Beyond the stage performances, local organizations will also be present throughout the evening to raise awareness, provide information, and strengthen connections within the community. A major raffle hosted by the beloved and extravagant Lolli Poppers will add even more energy to the night, offering attendees the chance to win a range of exciting prizes while supporting a meaningful cause.

More than just an anniversary party, the event serves as a reminder of why spaces like the center continue to matter. Across Europe and beyond, LGBTQIA+ communities still face discrimination, hostility, and political backlash. In that climate, local organizations providing support, advocacy, and safe spaces remain essential lifelines for many people navigating rejection, identity struggles, or violence.

Every ticket purchased will directly support the ongoing work of the Côte d’Azur LGBTQIA+ Center and its mission to welcome, assist, and defend LGBTQIA+ individuals in need.

Doors open at 6:00 PM, with the show running from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM. Tickets are priced at €6 and will be available both online and at the door.

But perhaps the heart of the evening is captured best by the message behind it all: after fifteen years of struggle, solidarity, joy, heartbreak, activism, friendship, and pride, this celebration is about honoring a community that continues to stand together.
Because unity remains strength.

And identity remains something to cherish — never hide.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

France Reaffirms Global Fight Against LGBTQIA+ Hate on International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia

 

As countries around the world marked the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (IDAHOBIT) on May 17, the French Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs issued a renewed call for global action against discrimination, violence, and persecution targeting LGBTQIA+ people.

In its official statement, France emphasized that the fight against anti-LGBTQIA+ hatred is not simply a domestic social issue, but a fundamental human rights obligation that transcends borders.

The ministry warned that LGBTQIA+ individuals continue to face criminalization, political scapegoating, censorship, violence, and systemic discrimination in many parts of the world.

The announcement arrives during a period of growing international tension surrounding LGBTQIA+ rights. Across several countries, governments and extremist movements have increasingly targeted transgender people, restricted queer visibility in schools and public life, and amplified disinformation campaigns portraying LGBTQIA+ communities as threats rather than citizens deserving equal protection.

France’s message was notably direct in framing equality and democracy as inseparable. Echoing broader European Union statements released this week, the ministry stressed that societies cannot claim to defend liberty while allowing entire groups of people to be marginalized or dehumanized because of who they are.

The International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia commemorates May 17, 1990 — the date the World Health Organization removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders. Since then, the day has become a global moment of remembrance, activism, and resistance against anti-LGBTQIA+ hatred.

France has long positioned itself as one of the European countries publicly advocating for LGBTQIA+ protections on the international stage. The French diplomatic network has repeatedly spoken out against criminalization laws abroad and supported initiatives defending sexual orientation and gender identity as protected human rights.

Yet the ministry’s statement also reflects a growing urgency. Even in democratic nations, anti-LGBTQIA+ rhetoric has increasingly moved from fringe spaces into mainstream political discourse.

Online harassment, organized misinformation, and coordinated attacks against trans communities have become normalized in many regions. Human rights advocates warn that history has repeatedly shown how quickly political hostility can evolve into institutional discrimination.

France’s declaration this year was ultimately more than symbolic diplomacy. It was a reminder that rights once considered secure can never be treated as permanent. Visibility, legal protections, and social acceptance were all hard fought — and remain vulnerable wherever fear and intolerance are allowed to flourish unchecked.

In a world where LGBTQIA+ people are still jailed, assaulted, silenced, or driven into hiding simply for existing, the message from France was clear: neutrality in the face of hate is not neutrality at all.