PARIS.- This outstanding exhibition is Gabriel Orozcos first at the Centre Pompidou, and the first opportunity to see his work in Paris since his exhibition Clinton is Innocent at the Musée dArt Moderne de la Ville de Paris in 1998. Orozco, who lives in Paris for several months a year, has been closely involved in developing the project, helping to design, together with Centre Pompidou curator Christine Macel, an exhibition of more than 80 works that offers an overview of his career from the beginnings to today. It offers an opportunity to see drawings, photographs, paintings and sculptures from collections public and private in France and abroad, many of which have never been seen in this country before. This exhibition at the Centre Pompidou follows shows at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Kunstmuseum, Basel; another will follow