Museum in Paris 4. Museum map of Paris

19.04.2019

Museums of Paris - description and photo. The most interesting Parisian museums.

In Paris, art is especially revered. Local museums strictly observe their traditions, showing visitors real masterpieces of classics and new authors. Some art historians note that Paris has long surpassed Berlin and New York in the highly artistic field. Getting to the capital of France, every tourist certainly strives to visit unique museums Paris.

The largest and most famous museum Paris. Connoisseurs believe that it is impossible to see all the exhibits in the Louvre. The museum houses a unique collection of various art objects that were made before the beginning of the 20th century. The Louvre is considered the main museum of Paris. It is in it that the unique Mona Lisa and Venus de Milo are located. Is it worth continuing that the Louvre is an amazing museum of rare values?


The museum houses two interesting and amazing collections of art from the 20th and 21st centuries. They include 50 unique masterpieces. There are objects of various trends - from surrealism to cubism. In the museum you can fully enjoy the exhibition of pop art. The Pompidou Center itself is a very interesting place, which is better not to pass by. The exhibitions held here every year are constantly updated.


The museum is located on the left bank of the Seine (from the Louvre, which is located on the right bank, you only need to cross the bridge). The collections of the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists are kept here: "Water Lilies" by K. Monet and "Dancers" by Degas. Works are also presented van gogh, Delacroix, E. Manet, Gauguin. You should definitely visit this museum.


The Small Palace has an amazing collection, which includes 1,300 exhibits. The museum is located near the Champs Elysees. Entry is free for everyone. The museum exhibits antique objects and antiques.


To the delight of the public in this museum, 8,000 exhibits are exhibited, which are rightfully recognized as true masterpieces. Works of the 20th and 21st centuries are presented here. The palace terrace offers a magnificent view of the Eiffel Tower.


The museum offers unique exhibitions of objects from the Middle Ages. There are interesting ancient artifacts, weapons, items of knightly use here. In no case should tourists lose sight of this museum. Interesting collections are unusual. Cluny Museum - interesting place French capital.


The museum is entirely dedicated to the work of the great sculptor Rodin and his students. A visit to the expositions presented here will allow you to get acquainted with the masterpieces in detail and deepen your own knowledge. In the garden of the museum is a large number of magnificent sculptures, including the famous "Thinker".


The City Museum of the History of Paris will help you get the most interesting information about the French capital and get to know it from the other side. Any tourist should definitely visit the unique halls of this museum. Each of its corners tells a fascinating story about unusual Paris. The exhibits tell about the times of the revolution, creative ups and downs. The entrance is free.


The museum is located in the Luxembourg Gardens. The park is a favorite vacation spot for all Parisians. The museum presents interesting educational exhibitions. They will be of interest to every visitor to the museum. Luxembourg garden - beautiful place Paris, where you can relax and gain new knowledge. The garden has been especially popular for several centuries.


The specialization of the museum french school XVIII century. Exquisite collections of art objects and luxurious interior decoration will impress any visitor. Entering this museum, you can experience a real delight from the dazzling splendor.

Museums in Paris

In terms of the number (and, perhaps, the quality) of museums, Paris ranks first in the world. On Sundays, admission to many national museums is free or half price. Discounts are available for students, pensioners and children under 18 years of age. However, the first two categories must present the relevant document.

Brief description of 40 museums in Paris and their locations

Museum d "0rse
Musee d'Orsay
1, rue de Bellechasse - 75007 Paris
www.musee-orsay.fr
It occupies the building of the former railway station. The world's largest museum of European art of the XIX century. The best collections of impressionists and post-impressionists: Manet, Monet, Renoir, Degas, Cezanne, Van Gogh.
Open from 10.00 to 18.00, Sunday - from 9.00 to 18.00. Monday is a day off.

Louvre Museum
Musee du Louvre
Palais du Louvre - Rue de Rivoli 75001 Paris
Encyclopedic Museum, consists of 7 departments, representing collections from ancient times to mid-nineteenth V.
By the number of exhibits, their value and diversity, as well as by the exhibition space, it ranks first in the world. The museum consists of four parts: the Richelieu Wing, the Sully Wing, the Denon Wing and the Old Louvre. On the free maps, which are spread out everywhere, the most important masterpieces of the museum are indicated - the statues of Nike of Samothrace and Venus de Milo, the "La Gioconda" by Leonardo da Vinci, as well as the creations of Raphael, Titian, Bosch, Pieter Brueghel the Elder, Rubens, Michelangelo, Cellini ...
The Louvre is open from 9.00 to 18.00. Wednesday - from 9.00 to 22.00. Tuesday is a day off.

Army Museum
Musee de l'Armee
Hotel National des Invalides - 129 rue de Crenelle - 75007 Paris- Collections of weapons, armor, uniforms and relics. IN Dome Cathedral The sarcophagus of Napoleon I is located.

Museum of African and Oceanic Art
Musee des Arts d "Afrique et d" Oceanie
293, avenue Daumesnil - 75012 Paris
Collection of African and Oceanian Art. Gorgeous tropical aquarium...

Museum of Honoré de Balzac.
Maison d'Honore de Balzac
47, rue Raynouard - 75016 Paris
Drawings, portraits, letters...

Bourdelle Museum
Musee Bourdelle
18, rue A. Bourdelle - 75015 Paris
Bronze, plaster, marble sculptures. drawings and paintings in the workshops in which the sculptor lived and worked all his life.

Cluny Museum
Place Paul-Painleve, 6
Large collection of medieval art.
Open from 9.15 to 17.45. Tuesday is a day off.

Carnavalet Museum
rue Savinet, 23
Very interesting city museum. History of Paris, archeology.
Open from 10.00 to 17.45. Monday is a day off.

Picasso Museum
Musee Picasso
Hotel Juigne-Sale, 5 rue de Thorigny - 75003 Paris
The name speaks for itself. Located in a 17th century mansion, which stands in the aristocratic Marais quarter.
Works from 9.30 to 18.00. Tuesday is a day off.

Orangerie Museum
Musee de I "Orangerie des Tuileries
Jardin de Tuileries - 75001 Paris (place de la Concorde).
Huge museum of impressionism, contemporary art. “Waters” by Claude Monet, paintings by Henri Rousseau, Modigliani, Picasso, Matisse. Collection of Walter Guillaume. Temporary exhibitions.
Open from 9.15 to 17.15. Tuesday is a day off.

Auguste Rodin Museum
Musee Auguste Rodin
Hotel Biron - 77, rue de Varenne -75007 Paris
Bronze and marble sculptures by Auguste Rodin (1840-1917), works by Camille Claudel, Van Gogh, Monet, Renoir. Vintage photographs. Sculptures are also exhibited in the park of the mansion.
In this house the great Auguste lived and worked. And then he bequeathed the mansion to the state on the condition that his works after his death would be exhibited in this house.
The museum is open from 10.00 to 18.00. Tuesday is a day off.

Auguste Rodin's house in Meudon
Maison d'Auguste Rodin
19, avenue Auguste Rodin - 92190 Meudon (5 km from Paris)
House of Auguste Rodin: unfinished works in plaster and clay, models of famous works.

Museums of National Antique Collections
Musee des Antiquites Nationales
Place du Chateau - 78103 Saint Germain en Laye - Collections of archaeological finds from all over France: the history of man from the moment of origin to the era of King Charlemagne.

Museum Palace of Versailles and Trianon
Musee des Chateaux de Versailles et du Trianon
78000 Versailles
Residence of the French kings since 1678 ( Louis XIV) to 1789 (Louis XVI).

Music Museum
Musee de la Musique
Cite de la Musique - 211, avenue Jean Jaures - 75019 Paris
A very rich collection of musical instruments from all over the world, mostly oriental from the 16th century to the present day.

La Villette Center
La Villette
30 avenue Corentin Cariou 75019 Paris
media library, planetarium, child Center. The Center presents the great scientific and technological achievements of our time.

Hebert Museum
Musee Hebert
Hotel de Montmorency - Bours - 85, rue du Cherche-Midi - 75006 Paintings, drawings, and watercolors by Ernst Gebert (1817-1908).

Museum of Oriental Art. Guimet
Musee Guimet des arts asiatiques
6, place d "lena - 75016 Paris

Museum of eyeglasses and lorgnettes
Gathered a unique collection of optical instruments and fixtures. Among the exhibits are monocles, binoculars, lorgnettes, glasses, Eskimo devices made of deer antlers to protect the eyes from the sun. st. Saint Honoré, 380.

Museum of the Olympic Games
The museum exposition is deployed in the Batignolles quarter, in the north of the French capital.

Attention, 9 free museums in Paris.

The permanent exhibitions of the museums owned by the City of Paris are now free.
There are 9 such museums - Museum contemporary art, Museum of the History of Paris Carnavalet, Museum of the History of Paris XVIII Cognac-Jay, Museum of Romantic Life, Bourdelle Museum, Zadkine Museum, Balzac House Museum, memorial museum Marshal Leclerc and the Liberation of Paris, Jean Moulin Museum.

Attention!
museum card
With a one-, three- and five-day card, you can visit 70 museums in Paris and its suburbs free of charge and skip the line.
The card is for sale in museums near monuments, at major metro stations and at the Paris Tourist Office (Champs Elysées, 127). Estimated cost:
1 day-15 euro, 3 days-30 euro, 5 days-45 euro.

Instructions for use!
Caution: travel card "for tourists in Paris"
There are few Parisian guidebooks and travel brochures that do not advertise the Paris Visite pass. In all these publications, Paris Visite appears as an absolutely necessary thing for a tourist: they say that it works both as a universal transport pass, and as a discount card in museums, and as a gift voucher in restaurants. However, in fact, almost all of this turns out to be a big zilch.

Today we offer to go on an extraordinary journey through the most unusual museums in Paris. No Louvre and Orsay! Ready? We have on the menu: medicine, smoking, magic, wine - and that's not all!

Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature (Museum of hunting and nature)

Address: 62 Rue des Archives, Paris, 75003

Schedule: Tuesday to Sunday from 11:00 to 18:00, closed on Monday

Entry fee: 6-8 euro

Nearest metro station: Hotel de Ville, Rambuteau


Photo: summerthorntondesign.com

The exposition of the museum is entirely devoted to the theme of hunting. In its halls, very often a variety of weapons (from knives and crossbows to guns and traps), paintings and trophies - about 6,000 items in total. Half of them were collected by avid hunters François and Jacqueline Somme, for whom the creation of a precious collection has become a life's work. Among the artistic treasures at the Musée de la Chasse et de la Nature, you can admire the creations of Chardin, Snyders, Rubens and Lucas Cranach.

Musée de la Magie (Museum of Magic)

Address: 11 Rue Saint-Paul, Paris, 75004

Schedule: Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday from 14:00 to 19:00

Entry fee: 7–12 euros

Nearest metro station: Sully Morland, Pont Marie


Photo: expointhecity.com
Photo: imagesetmagies.over-blog.com

If you have always dreamed of uncovering the secrets of clever and famous magicians, be sure to visit the Paris Museum of Magic. A walk through its halls will let you know how the most spectacular and mysterious tricks and tricks were created and realized.

After the tour, you will understand how the illusionists manage to float in the air, and their assistants disappear as soon as they sit on the magic chair of Buatiers de Colt, or remain alive after sawing in half. In addition, here you can see in the smallest detail the caskets with a secret, magic wands and other professional equipment of magicians, mediums and fortune-tellers.

A separate room contains a collection of optical illusions, where interesting visual illusions are created with the help of mirrors and other objects. And here is the Museum of entertaining automata - toys that reproduce human movements.

Musée de la Prèfecture de police (Museum of the Prefecture of Police)

Address: 4 Rue de la Montagne Sainte Genevieve, Paris, 75005

Schedule: Monday to Friday from 9:00 to 17:30, Saturday and Sunday from 10:00 to 12:30

Nearest metro station: Maubert Mutualite


Photo: criminocorpus.hypotheses.org
Photo: parislesstraveled.wordpress.com

The history of the Museum of the Prefecture of Police began back in 1900, when documents and material evidence from the French Prefecture of Police were presented at the world exhibition held in Paris. After 9 years, the collection of exhibits was significantly expanded, and on its basis the Musée de la Prèfecture de police was opened.

On the stands and walls of the museum there are uniforms of French police officers of different years, weapons, the most unimaginable tools of crime, and even a real guillotine, on which notorious criminals were executed. Currently, the museum is located in the building of the current police station. Free admission.

Musée Dupuytren (Dupuytren Museum)

Address: 15 Rue de l "École de Médecine, Paris, 75006

Schedule: Monday to Friday from 14:00 to 16:30, Saturday and Sunday - day off

Entry fee: 5 euro

Nearest metro station: Odeon


Photo: hideme.io
Photo: directmatin.fr

If interest in pathology and curiosity in medical practice outweigh disgust at the sight of internal organs, alcoholized embryos and other unpleasant exhibits, feel free to go to the Dupuytren Museum.

What's interesting here? Of the 6000 items presented on the shelves and stands of the Musée Dupuytren, some will definitely cause shock or at least surprise: for example, Siamese twin cows, human embryos with various malformations or models of anomalies before and after operations to correct them. You definitely won't be bored here! But don't count on having fun either.

The future of the exposition is very gloomy: the museum is not funded by the state, and there is not enough money from ticket sales to maintain the collection in proper condition, not to mention its expansion.

Musée d'Histoire de la Médecine (Museum of the History of Medicine)

Address: 12 Rue de l "École de Médecine, Paris, 75006

Schedule: Thursday and Sunday - day off, other days from 14:00 to 17:30

Entry fee: 3.5 euro

Nearest metro station: Odeon


Photo: jrkenned.wordpress.com

Everyone can continue their acquaintance with the medical profession at the Museum of the History of Medicine. It is located just a few steps from the Musée Dupuytren. Here you can delve into all the details and details of the origin and development of medical science in Paris and France: find out how the sick were treated in churches when there were no hospitals, how abandoned children were taken care of, what equipment and instruments doctors used in the treatment of various diseases.

Part of the Health Museum is the Museum of Pierre Fauchard - the "progenitor" of modern dentistry. Nearby is the Museum of the Middle Ages, wandering through the halls of which will be entertaining for history buffs.

Musée du Fumeur (Smoking Museum)

Address: 7 Rue Pache, Paris, 75011

Schedule: from Monday to Saturday from 12:30 to 19:30

Entry fee: 2 euros, admission to the library-shop is free

Nearest metro station: Voltaire


Photo: miroved.com

Paris is one of the first cities in the world in terms of the number of smokers. It is not surprising that a museum dedicated to this bad habit. On an area of ​​60 sq. m has collected a huge collection of materials and information on the preparation and use of cigarettes, cigars, as well as smoking mixtures from hemp, shamanic and other herbs. Here you can also buy colorful brochures about the dangers of this habit, as well as a spectacular tobacco pipe or other smoking accessory.

Musée du Vin (Wine Museum)

Address: 5 Square Charles Dickens, Paris, 75016

Schedule: from Tuesday to Saturday from 10:00 to 18:00

Entry fee: 10 euros (wine tasting is paid separately)

Nearest metro station: Passy


Photo: paris.onvasortir.com

Have an interesting trip and see you soon!

List of 20 amazing museums in Paris. Under each museum you will find a description, the address of the official website, the price of the entrance ticket, and the opening hours. To whom and when you can go for free.

20 unique museums in Paris

Paris without too much modesty can boast of unique sights. This is the most popular tourist city in the world - the most tourists come here and most often buy.

If you are going to go around several museums at once, the Paris Museum Pass will come in handy - it gives you access to more than 60 museums and attractions in Paris, including castles in the surrounding area. You will be able to skip the queues and ride public transport for free. There is an option, there is.

Tickets to museums can be bought in advance on the websites of museums or in the service.

Louvre Museum (Louvre Paris)

© Edi Nugraha / pixabay.com / CC BY 2.0

You can write a separate article about the largest and most popular museum in the world, but not this time.

Initially, the Louvre castle was conceived as a medieval fortress, and only in the 17th century it became a gallery for artists seeking to study ancient art and the works of masters of the past. 230 years have passed, and humanity has a museum, which can take weeks to get acquainted with the exhibits. France has much to be proud of.

In the Louvre, you can see antiques from many world cultures, Renaissance works and Baroque art.

If you have little time, then be sure to take a look at the most important exhibits: the statue of the winged Nike of Samothrace, which is already 2,200 years old, Eugene Delacroix's painting "Liberty Leading the People", a portrait of Francis I (Francois Clouet), Gabriel d "Estre with his sister ( Unknown artist), and of course the Mona Lisa (Leonardo da Vinci).

  • Buy tickets online on the official website (this way you skip the line)
  • Can be reached on foot and by metro. Desired stations: Palais-Royal (Musee du Louvre) - metro lines 1 and 7,Louvre-Rivoli - 1. The famous Pyramid is waiting for you.
  • Ticket price: 12 - 17 euros, under 18s - free of charge.
  • Opening hours: Tue. - day off, Mon, Thu, Sat and Sun - 9:00 - 17:45, Wed, Fri - 9:00 - 21:45

Museum d "Orsay (Musee d'Orsay)

In the building of the former station, you will find the Musée d'Orsay and its entire collection of works, sculptures, decor and household items. The museum is located on the left bank of the Seine, it was prepared for the 1900 World Exhibition.

Over time, Orsay has become one of the largest art museums in the world, firmly taking its place between the Louvre and the National Museum of Modern Art in the Pompidou Center.

In the gallery you will find famous Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings such as Renoir - Ball at the Moulin de la Galette, Cezanne - The Card Players and Apples and Oranges, Van Gogh - The Starry Night, Manet - Luncheon on the Grass.

  • Official website: http://www.musee-orsay.fr/
  • Opening hours: Tue - Sun: 9:30 - 18:00, Mon- day off.
  • Ticket price: preferential - 9 euros, full - 12, under 18 years old - free of charge. The first Sunday of every month is free for everyone, expect long queues that day.

Invalides House (Hôtel des Invalides)

© wallyg / www.flickr.com / CC BY 2.0

The luxurious Les Invalides was founded by Louis XIV in 1670 to give shelter to destitute war veterans. It functions as a state nursing home for military personnel to this day, fully equipped with comfort and medicine to care for retirees.

In Les Invalides you will find several museums dedicated to the history and military past of France:

  • Museum of Relief Plans (Musée des Plans) - tactical models of cities designed for military commanders of the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries are exhibited here;
  • Army Museum (Musée de l'Armée is France's) - the national military museum of France, here you will see medieval armor, uniforms, military figurines, artillery, a Renault FT17 tank and a V-2 rocket;
  • Museum of Contemporary History - exhibits aimed at comprehending historical and contemporary international relations.

In Paris, next to the Les Invalides, there is former cathedral, burial of military heroes, the grave of Napoleon.

  • Official website: http://www.musee-armee.fr/ru/home.html
  • Opening hours: November 1 - March 31- 10:00 - 17:00, April 1 - October 31- 10:00 - 18:00. The museum is closed every first Sunday of the month, except during the summer period.
  • Ticket price: preferential - 9 euros, full - 11, under 18 years old - free of charge.

The Orangerie Museum (Musée de l'Orangerie)

The museum in the greenhouse of the Tuglieri castle was created by Napoleon III after Claude Monet presented 8 canvases to the French government as a sign of the end of the First World War, united by the common theme “Waters”. More than 90 years have passed, and these canvases still adorn the oval halls of the Orangerie Museum in Paris and make a strong impression on everyone who sees them.

The Musée de l'Orangerie contains works of the Impressionists and Post-Impressionists. You will find here works by Paul Cezanne, Matisse, Renoir, Rousseau, Sisley, Picasso and Chaim Soutine.

  • Official website: http://www.musee-orangerie.fr/
  • Opening hours: Tue. - day off, Wed - Mon. - 9:00 - 18:00.
  • Ticket price: 9 euros, preferential - 6.5 euros. Under 18s admission is free. On the first Sunday of every month, admission is free for everyone.

Museum of Contemporary Art in the Center Georges Pompidou (Place Georges Pompidou)

Even more than 40 years after the creation of the post-modern Pompidou Center in Paris, its unusual design is attracting attention. Inside the building is a huge library, an institute contemporary music IRCAM and the main asset is the museum. Musée National d'Art Moderne is Europe's largest contemporary art museum and one of the top 10 most visited museums in the world.

In the museum's collection you can find bright works of modern art, from 1905 to the present day.

Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Kandinsky, Braque, Calder and Klee, Yves Klein, Warhol, Lichtenstein, Nam June Paik and Joseph Beuys are waiting for you at the museum in France.

Exhibitions are often held on the panoramic top floor, and over the past 5 years, works by Jeff Koons, Henri Cartier-Bresson and Dali have been exhibited there. Opens from the top floor beautiful view to the city. You can buy a separate "View of Paris" ticket to see Paris from above without entering the museum.

  • Official website: https://www.centrepompidou.fr/en
  • Opening hours: Tue. - day off, Wed - Mon.- 11:00 - 21:00, at Thu. The center is open until 23:00.
  • Ticket price: 14 euros, preferential - 11 euros. Under 18s admission is free. On the first Sunday of every month, admission is free for everyone.

Marmottan Monet Museum (Musée Marmottan Monet)

© ministeriodacultura / www.flickr.com / CC BY 2.0

The Marmottan Museum began as a repository of works from the First World War. In the 1950s and 60s, the museum received a number of Impressionist works as a gift, including from Michel, the second son of Claude Monet. At one point, the museum got hold of the largest collection of Monet paintings in the world.

Among them is the masterpiece “Impression. Rising Sun”, which depicts the port in Le Havre. After this picture, impressionism got its name as a direction in painting.

In Marmottan you will find paintings by Renoir, Degas, Gauguin, Morisot, Sisley and many others, accompanied by decorative items from the Napoleonic era and a selection of medieval manuscripts.

  • Official website: http://www.marmottan.fr/uk/
  • Opening hours: Mon. - day off, Daily- 10:00 - 18:00, during Tue the museum is open until 21:00.
  • Ticket price: 11 euros, preferential - 6.5 euros. Up to 7 years old admission is free.

Rodin Museum (Musee Rodin)

© PatricioHurtado / pixabay.com / CC BY 2.0

Before his death in 1917, Auguste Rodin bequeathed his works and personal collection to the French government, on the condition that Biron's mansion, which housed his studio, be turned into the Rodin Museum in Paris. You will find it on the map at the beginning of the article.

The mansion itself was built in the 1700s, and it serves as an excellent backdrop for masterpieces of world sculpture. There are more than 6,000 sculptures by Rodin and his muse Camille Claudel on the territory. Here you will find The Thinker, The Kiss, The Citizens of Calais and The Gates of Hell, as well as thousands of sketches, sketches and photographs of Auguste.

Rodin himself was an avid collector and collected antiquities from Egypt, Greece and Rome, as well as paintings by Renoir and Van Gogh.

  • Official website: http://www.musee-rodin.fr/en
  • How to get there: Musée Rodin, 77 rue de Varenne, 75007 Paris, France

    Metro: Varenne (13 line) or Invalides (13 and 8 line)
    R.E.R.: Invalids (line C)
    Bus : 69, 82, 87, 92

  • Opening hours: Daily- 10:00 - 17:45, ticket offices are open until 17:15
  • Ticket price: 10 euros - access to the garden and museum, 4 euros - access to the garden only.

Medieval Museum / Cluny Museum (Musée de Cluny)

South of the Île de la Cité Sorbonne in Paris is the opulent Gothic mansion of the Abbey of Cluny. The abbey was built in the 14th century, and in the 15th century a medieval courtyard was built. It was erected on the ruins of Roman thermae; there are still the remains of the Gallo-Roman baths of the 2nd century.

The collection of the Clooney Museum has many items medieval life: armor, a gun, travel chests, church utensils, the interior is decorated with stained-glass windows, sculptural reliefs.

The crowning achievement of the collection is a set of 6 wool and silk tapestries "The Lady and the Unicorn", woven in Flanders around 1500.

  • Official website: http://www.musee-moyenage.fr/en/home.html
  • Opening hours: Daily - 09:15 - 17:45, Tue. - day off.
  • Ticket price: 5 euros, 4 euros - reduced ticket. Every first Sunday of the month - free entry for everyone.

Jacquemart André Museum (Musée Jacquemart-André)

© damiavos / www.flickr.com / CC BY 2.0

In the 19th century, Édouard André, heir to a banking fortune, invested his wealth in an unusual art collection.

André and his wife Nélie Jacquemart were well versed in painting Italian Renaissance. Every year they traveled to Italy to return with works that still adorn their mansion.

In their apartment winter garden, Italian gallery you will find paintings by Botticelli, Canaletto, Bellini, Perugino, Uccello, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Frans Hals, as well as sculptures by Donatello and Luca della Robbia.

  • Official website: https://www.musee-jacquemart-andre.com/en/home
  • Opening hours: Daily - 10:00 - 18:00
  • Address: 158, boulevard Haussmann 75008 Paris

    You can get there:
    Metro: lines 9 and 13, stations Saint-Augustin, Miromesnil or Saint-Philippe du Roule
    rer: line A, Charles de Gaulle-Étoile station
    By bus: routes 22, 43, 52, 54, 28, 80, 83, 84, 93

Museum on the Quai Branly (Musée du Quai Branly)

In Paris, a few steps from the Seine and the Eiffel Tower, there is a museum of the indigenous peoples of Oceania, North and South America, Asia and Africa.

You will not pass by the Branly Museum, it is hard not to notice, one of its buildings is alive. The Green Wall is the brainchild of botanist Patrick Blanc and consists of 15,000 plants in 150 varieties.

The interior of the museum is also amazing. In a dimly lit and creative interior, you will walk along a winding path through space and time, and see Moorish brooches, ritual masks from West Africa, Indian totems, masks from Peru, a solemn throne from Indonesia.

The gardens of the museum deserve special attention. They are extraordinary, resembling deserts in miniature, surrounded by pools, streams, groves, trees and small hills.

  • Official website: http://quaibranly.fr
  • Opening hours: Sun., Wed., Sun. - 11:00 - 19:00, Thu., Fri., Sat. - 11:00 - 21:00, Mon. - day off.
  • Ticket price: 10 euros, 7 euros - reduced ticket.

Museum of Decorative Arts (Musée des Arts Décoratifs)

© yellowmo / www.flickr.com / CC BY 2.0

Between the Louvre and the Tuileries, you will find a museum of decorative arts from the Middle Ages. The museum was founded in Paris in 1905 by the Union des Arts Décoratifs. In the intricate corridors of the museum you will find about 6,000 exhibits, there are Renaissance tapestries, dishes, graphics, silk wallpapers, sculptures and much, much more.

If you don't have a lot of time, I advise you to focus on one area, whether it be Art Nouveau and Art Deco design (presented in 10 rooms), or maybe you are interested in porcelain from Sewv Manufactory or the most big collection glass in France, there are works by Lalique, Baccarat, Tiffany and Gale.

  • Official website: http://madparis.fr/en
  • Address: 107-111, rue de Rivoli
  • Opening hours: Tue - Sun.:11:00 - 18:00, On Tuesdays, temporary exhibitions are open until 21:00. Mon. - day off.
  • Ticket price: 13 euros - permanent collection + temporary exhibitions + ticket to the Camondo Museum, 11 euros - permanent collection + temporary exhibitions.

Nissim de Camondo Museum (Musée Nissim de Camondo)

The royal neoclassical mansion that houses the museum belonged to the banker Moise de Camondo. In 1911, he housed his collection of decorative art from the 17th and 18th centuries, turning the mansion into a museum.

The house has been preserved in the same form as it was 100 years ago. Anyone who appreciates French decor will find themselves in their favorite element, bypassing 3 floors, furnished with exquisite French furniture, textiles and porcelain.

The museum has paintings by Elisabeth Vigée Le Brun, Savonnerie carpets woven in the 1600s for the Grand Gallery of the Louvre, Aubusson and Beauvais tapestries.

  • Official website: http://madparis.fr/en/museums/musee-nissim-de-camondo
  • Address: 63 Rue de Monceau
  • Opening hours: Wed - Sun.:10:00 - 17:30, Mon., Tue- day off.
  • Ticket price: for 13 euros you can buy a ticket to the Nissim de Camondo Museum and the Museum of Decorative Arts.

Museum of Arts and Crafts (Musée des Arts et Métiers)

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In the monastery of Saint-Martin-des-Champs (Saint-Martin-des-Champs) at the metro station Arts et Métiers is a museum that protects the greatest inventions of France. This is one of the most famous buildings in Paris because it has survived from the Middle Ages and is a piece of living history. But what you find inside is even more captivating.

The museum was founded in 1794 as proof of the contribution of the French to science and technology. There are about 2,500 archival objects and more than 80,000 exhibits here.

Some of them have changed the world. For example, Foucault's Pendulum, Bartholdi's model of the Statue of Liberty, the first aircraft - Clement Adair's Ader Avion III, early cars - Panhard & Levassor type A and Lenoir's Gas Engine of 1860.

  • Official website: https://arts-et-metiers.net/
  • Address: 60 rue Reaumur
  • Opening hours: Tue - Wed: from 10:00 to 18:00,Thu: 10:00 - 21:30, Fri - Sun: from 10:00 to 18:00
  • Ticket price: 8 euros, preferential - 5.5.

Albert Kahn Museum (Musee Albert Kahn)

At the beginning of the 20th century, the banker Albert Kahn undertook the mission of capturing the world of that time on photo and videotape. For 22 years, he sent photographers and cameramen to all corners of the world. The project was stopped only by the crisis on Wall Street.

During this time, the Archives of the Planet took 72,000 color photographs and 180,000 meters of film, which served as the basis for the creation of the museum.

Outside the museum are the gardens that Albert Kahn designed over 100 years ago. For 40,000 sq. m there are French and English gardens, as well as traditional and modern Japanese. Kahn recreated a section of forest from the Vosges and a "blue forest" where azaleas and rhododendrons bloom in spring.

  • Official website: http://albert-kahn.hauts-de-seine.fr/english/
  • Address: 10-14, rue du Port
  • At the time of this writing (08/22/2018), the museum was closed for repairs. Check the site for up-to-date information.

Guimet Museum

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If you want to see a piece of Asia in Europe, take a look at the Guimet Museum while walking around Paris. Industrialist Emile Etienne Guimet was a passionate traveler. In the 1870s he was sent to Asia to study religion. During his trip, he amassed a large art collection.

The Guimet Museum was opened in 1889. To this day, it is the largest museum of Asian art outside of Asia. In the museum's collection, modern art is interspersed with antiquities.

Here you will find Indian fabrics, Greco-Buddhist sculptures from Afghanistan and Pakistan, Japanese samurai armor. From China, Guimet brought statues and porcelain, paintings and reliefs from different dynasties, there are even those that belonged to the Han dynasty in the 1st century.

  • Official website: http://www.guimet.fr/
  • Address: 6, place d'Iena
  • Ticket price: 11.5 euros, preferential - 8.5. Every first Sunday of the month admission is free.

Museum of Ceramics (Sèvres - Cité de la Céramique)

Sevres is the most famous name in French ceramics. Once he was a member of the royal, then the imperial, and now the national manufactory since 1756. The museum was opened in 2010.

Here you will see 50,000 ceramic items from all eras. Most of the collection is devoted to European porcelain from 1400-1800, but there are also Moorish, ancient Greek ceramics, Chinese porcelain and terracotta from North America.

  • Address: 2 Place de la Manufacture
  • Opening hours: open every day from 10:00 to 12:30 and from 13:30 to 17:00, except Tuesdays.
  • Ticket price: 6 euros, preferential - 4.5.

Museum of Fair Art (Musée des Arts Forains)

An old wine warehouse in southeast Paris houses a stunning collection of vintage rides and vending machines created by art dealer and antiquary Jean Paul Favande.

The museum's collection includes 14 attractions, carousels, 16 slot machines and 1500 small games and entertainment such as Hooghuys Organ, barrel organ, etc. All exhibits date back to 1850-1950. Up close, you will notice how carefully the details of carousels and slot machines are made.

  • Address: 53 Av. Terroirs of France
  • Opening hours: you need to sign up for a tour in advance on the website, you won’t just come here from the street. Guided tours are in French, there are brochures in English.

Museum of Architecture (Cité de l'Architecture et du Patrimoine)

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On the terrace of the Palais de Chaillot, you will have the canonical view of the Eiffel Tower across the Seine. The Palais de Chaillot building is divided into western and eastern wings. Here you will find 3 museums. The most interesting is the Museum of French Monuments, created by the architect and restorer Eugène Viollet-le-Duc in 1879.

In the museum you will see portals cathedrals, a gallery of magnificent stained-glass windows, examples of innovative design, there is even a full-size copy of Le Corbusier's apartment.

  • Address: 1, place du Trocadero et du 11 Novembre
  • Opening hours: open every day from 11:00 to 19:00, except Tuesdays.
  • Ticket price: 8 euros, preferential - 6.

Film Museum (La Cinemathèque Française)

In the southeast of Paris, next to the Seine, you will find a stunning building that only Frank Gehry could have designed. This is the former American Center built in 1994. Now here is a real repository of the wonders of cinema.

There are 17th-century magic lanterns and a collection of 25,000 projection plates, inventions by Auguste and Louis Lumiere, as well as cameras, posters, props and even costumes worn by Louis Brooks, Greta Garbo and Vivien Leigh.

Every year, a new movie is chosen for the exhibition, which has made a splash, there have already been creations by Antonioni, Scorsese, Truffaut and Gus van Santa.

  • Address: 51 Rue de Bercy
  • Opening hours: open every day from 12:00 to 19:00, except Tuesdays.
  • Ticket price: 5 euros, preferential - 4.

Picasso Museum (Musee Picasso)

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After a five-year renovation, the Picasso Museum was reopened in 2014. It is located in Paris in the refined Hotel Salé, a Baroque house built in 1650. It used to belong to a tax official who collected the salt tax, hence the name.

Now the museum is in the state property of France. He amassed his collection by allowing Picasso's descendants to pay their inheritance tax on Pablo's art.

Since 1968, the museum has managed to amass an impressive collection of over 5,000 works, reflecting each creative period Picasso and discovering his creative process.

There is even a collection of sculptures, but mostly paintings, sketches, drawings, engravings, illustrations and photographs. Here you will find works from the private collection of Pablo Picasso, from ancient Iberian bronzes and African statues, to paintings by Matisse, Degas, Seurat and Paul Cezanne.

  • Official website: http://www.museepicassoparis.fr/
  • Opening hours: Tue - Fri. - 10:30 - 18:00, Sat. - Sun. - 10:30 - 18:00, Mon.- day off
  • Ticket price: from 11 euros, you can buy on the website
  • Address: 5 rue de Thorigny
  • How to get there:

    Metro: line 1, Saint-Paul station, 8 Saint-Sébastien-Froissart, 8 Chemin Vert
    Bus: route, - 20, stop Saint-Claude ou Saint-Gilles Chemin Vert, 29: Rue Vieille Du Temple, 65: Rue Vieille Du Temple, 75: Archives – Rambuteau, 69: Rue Vieille du Temple – Mairie 4e, 96: Bretagne

It is no coincidence that Paris is called the cultural capital of Europe. It is difficult to find such a variety of museums as concentrated in this city anywhere. Everyone who visits the capital of France has the opportunity to see with his own eyes not only works of art famous masters but also get acquainted in detail with other equally interesting aspects of the life of the city. Therefore, all museums in Paris are conveniently divided into several main groups, depending on the interests of visitors.

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In honor of the no less famous colleague and contemporary of Balzac - Victor Hugo, a museum was opened on the Royal Square (now the Vosges), in old house at number 6. Here, in the apartment on the 2nd floor, the family of the great humanist lived for almost 16 years, during which the writer, already well-known and favored by the attention of those in power, created his best works. The walls of this house remember other great personalities of the past who come here: Dumas, Liszt, Rossini, Balzac, Mérimée. The opening of the museum took place in 1902, on the 100th anniversary of the birth of Hugo, on the initiative of a friend of the writer Meris, who bought the mansion and laid the foundation for the foundation.

The organizers tried to recreate the true atmosphere of everyday life, many pieces of furniture exactly match the real prototypes. There are many paintings by famous artists who painted canvases for the Hugo family depicting his wife, children and the writer himself. There is a "Red Room", furnished with luxurious carved furniture, with many portraits of the writer's friends and famous people of France. Of interest is the "Chinese living room", on the design of which Hugo himself worked. It contains many items that reflect Chinese life and artistic creativity, collected by the writer: plates, figurines, vases. The Gothic dining room is very impressive.

The museum bears the name of the sculptor-caricaturist Alfred Grevin, who worked hard on creating wax copies of figures of world celebrities and famous fictional characters. This is how the initiator of the project, French journalist Arthur Meyer, expressed his gratitude, who had a burning desire to create a museum in Paris wax figures like London. Grevin's works amaze with their striking resemblance to the prototypes; they convey the finest individual details of the originals: gestures, gaze, facial features, hands.

This "collection" presents long-gone personalities who created history, politics, art in different times and epochs. There are many who continue to do great things in the name of progress and prosperity. Who is not here: music geniuses Mozart and Beethoven, world politicians Kennedy and de Gaulle, Napoleon and Charles 12, Hollywood and French film stars, famous athletes and singers, artists and writers - about 500 wax figures. Here everyone will have the opportunity to meet their idols, with whom they did not have a chance to communicate in reality.

Salvador Dali Museum

Wherever the museums of the famous surrealist are not open, Paris could not resist the talent of the brilliant Catalan, the museum of which was prepared for the most honorable place for representatives of art - Parisian bohemia - the brilliant Montmartre. The outstanding creator left so many diverse masterpieces of painting, sculpture, graphics, engraving that they were enough to provide the expositions of all museums. The Paris Museum of his name presents more than 300 works of art: paintings, sculptures, engravings.

The ambiguous look at familiar things, the mystical overtones of his work is very impressive, it makes you think and reason, and not just mindlessly contemplate what is depicted. Through the artist's fantasies, it expresses so many tones and halftones, so many emotions that one can look at this or that creation for a long time, causing a storm of feelings (“Outlines of time”, “ space elephant" and others).

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Museum of Magic

This museum, opened in the basement of an old house at the address: st. St. Paul, 11 - a tribute and admiration for the difficult art of illusionism and sorcery. Even the most notorious skeptics cannot but be surprised by the tricks of the famous illusionists - this art well deserves the Museum of Magic in Paris. The reason for its discovery was a private collection of all kinds of paraphernalia for various tricks and juggling items, which the creator Georges Proust was very fond of at first. Also fascinated by magic, he collected a large number of objects used by conjurers and illusionists. At first, his collection was shown from time to time at exhibitions, and since 1993 it has become the basis for the opened museum.

Miracles here begin from the threshold, when you open the door: next to it, on a pen with a pen, a crafty “devil” writes an invitation to enter with it. Entering inside, you find yourself in a magical realm, in which 15 illusionary representations replace each other. After them, there is a demonstration of magical items that lead to amazement: a chair, a box, wands, etc. Inspection of unusual exhibits will bring a lot of pleasure.

Museum of Marmottan Monet

There are so many museums in Paris that you can find them in many different places, for example, in the Bois de Boulogne, where the Museum of Impressionism is located in a former hunting lodge from the 19th century. A passionate collector of paintings, Marmottan, having become the owner of a cozy mansion, placed art paintings from the Napoleonic era in it. The heir of Marmottan replenished his father's collection with books, new paintings, antique furniture and bequeathed everything art academy who set up a museum here.

Gradually, the fund expanded through private collections, including works by famous French impressionists. Most of them belonged to the brush of Monet, so officially it became known as the Marmottan-Monet Museum. Only here you can see Monet's magnificent canvas "Impression of the Sunrise", which marked the beginning of impressionism in painting and many other masterpieces. The 2nd floor of the building is completely occupied by wonderful landscapes, portraits, views of Paris captured by Monet and his students. The 1st floor is dedicated to Marmottan exhibits: Empire style furniture, majestic sculptures and portraits of Napoleon, Persian carpets, and other luxury items. Here is a unique collection of miniature books of the European Middle Ages.

The center, which contains objects symbolizing all scientific and technological achievements, their path of development and improvement, attracts millions of tourists. People of all ages will be able to satisfy the versatile curiosity here: the history of the Universe, the Earth, the discoveries of astronomers, the secrets of the human brain, the exploration of the oceans - the range of topics presented in the sections of the center is immeasurably wide. Visiting the center is not just contemplation, but active participation in the process of various experiments with light and sound, with a steam engine, with the rotation of the Earth.

The “City of Science and Industry” includes the Museum of Science and Industry, the Geode cinematographic sphere, the Argonaut submarine, an aquarium, auditorium them. Lumiere, Planetarium, scientific entertainment center for children. Visits here are especially useful for the latter in order to consolidate in practice the knowledge gained at school.

Picasso Museum

The magnificent three-story mansion of Sale of the classical style is a worthy place for the museum to the brilliant nugget, who had the universal talent of an artistic creator - Pablo Picasso. A talented sculptor, a great innovative artist, an engraver, a ceramics master, a graphic artist - this is all one Picasso, the founder of a new direction in art - cubism and a successor to the traditions of surrealism. Here is the largest collection various works a unique artist, chronologically reflecting all periods of the life and work of the great Spaniard.

Among the exhibits are many masterpieces from private property Picasso family, but there are also those that belong to the state. In addition to the master's works, there are many newspaper and magazine clippings of laudatory and critical content, author's manuscripts, photographs and personal belongings of the genius.

Fragonard Perfume Museum

Paris has long been famous for exquisite perfumes with the finest aroma. Secular ladies considered it an honor to use them, for every Soviet woman it was a great happiness to get a bottle of French perfume. But even now the prestige of the famous French perfume is still on top. The Fragonard Museum is a temple of divine aromas that you begin to feel already at the entrance.

It was founded by the company of the same name, whose owners are the descendants of the artist and esthete Fragonard, and did not lose: people come here in droves, like to the Louvre. Here you can “taste” the smells of hundreds of perfumes, learn the detailed history of this perfume, hear stories about the incredible abilities of “scenters”, see special devices for the production of aromatic liquids and bottles of various shapes and sizes. Fascinating penetration into the world of beautiful smells will give everyone aesthetic pleasure.

Musee d'Orsay

For the World Exhibition of 1900, the Gare d'Orsay was built in the very center of Paris in order to relieve the rest of the stations and stations in Paris and its suburbs. Technologically, it was the most innovative building of the time and the first electrified station. But after the exhibition, it was practically not used for its intended purpose, and by the 40s it was completely empty. In 1980, the building was reconstructed and part of the collections stored in the Louvre was placed in it. In 1986, the Museum opened and has since become one of the main galleries visual arts not only in Paris, but throughout the world.

Collected works of fine art of the late XIX - early XX centuries. The richest collection of impressionists and post-impressionists, masterpieces of Monet and Manet, Seurat, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Degas, Pissarro and other great artists has been collected. The sculpture is represented by the works of Rodin, Camille Claudel, Maillol, Degas and other masters. In addition to painting, a large collection of drawings by artists of the same era and photography as special kind fine arts, which also has historical value. A separate hall is dedicated to arts and crafts: furniture and interior items, a collection of dishes, stained-glass windows and decorative wooden panels.

Orangerie Museum

It is housed in the greenhouse left over from the large palace complex. The palace was destroyed during the revolution, the garden, which is very fond of Parisians, has been preserved, and the greenhouse for a long time served as a warehouse, then as soldiers' barracks, and in 1927 it housed a museum, which became a kind of continuation of d'Orsay. On two floors there are paintings by artists of the beginning of the last century - Monet, Cezanne, Matisse, Modigliani, Renoir and others. The second floor is completely given over greatest creation Claude Monet - "To the Water Lilies".

The master bequeathed his work to France with only one condition - all eight paintings must be exhibited together. They were first shown here on May 16, 1927, a few months after the artist's death. This was the beginning of the Orangerie. Monet worked on Water Lilies for four years during the First World War. Looking at the horrors of these years, he wanted to give the world a picture that would help people restore harmony in their souls. He broke the whole job down into eight large paintings, having carefully planned the exposition and thought over the plot of each part.

Pompidou Center

In terms of attendance, the Pompidou Center ranks third among the sights of Paris after the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre. It was organized at the suggestion of President Georges Pompidou and was named after him. The building of the Museum of Modern Art has become a symbol of the modernization of all spheres of society. The center opened at midnight on New Year's Eve from 1977 to 1978: all engineering structures - elevators, electrical wires, sewer and ventilation pipes - were moved outside, thereby freeing up the internal area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe premises.

There is a cinema hall on the ground floor. Festivals of auteur and arthouse cinema are held here annually. The next two floors are occupied by the library, which contains millions of books, video and audio materials. The Museum of Modern Art begins on the third floor. It is represented by all modern trends and genres. The best examples in painting, architecture, sculpture, design and photography. Masterpieces of artists of the 20th century are also kept here: Kandinsky, Mathis, Picasso. Exhibitions, temporary exhibitions and performances are held on the fifth floor.

From the upper floors of the gallery you can look at the city - all of Paris is visible at a glance. Artists, street musicians and performers constantly gather on the square in front of the center.

Playing Card Museum

Two small private collections of pre-war playing cards formed the basis of the museum, opened in 1986. He occupied the former mansion of the Princes of Conti. However, over time, the museum grew, and after 10 years it was decided to build a separate building for it. Now the mansion and the modern building, where the museum moved in 1997, are connected by a covered gallery. Now the collection has about 11 thousand exhibits.

These are original playing cards from around the world and from different eras: brightly colored Indian ones, quirky Japanese ones that use mussel shells instead of the usual cards, Renaissance cards, famous Tarot cards, and even World War II cards with caricatures of Mussolini and Hitler. In addition to them, printing presses are presented, with the help of which decks were made; a collection of works of art depicting the game of cards or the cards themselves: paintings, ceramics, engravings, etc. Closed in August and on public holidays.

Sewer Museum

Once upon a time, when Paris was also part of the Roman Empire, the Romans, who cared about the cleanliness of the surrounding space, were the first to sewer here. But many years have passed since then, and in the Middle Ages the streets of the city were a breeding ground for infections, because ordinary city ditches served as sewers, where all sewage was merged. Only in the 19th century, the engineer Belgrand designed such a system of tunnels, which, in fact, being an underground backup of the Parisian streets, made it possible to quickly clear the city of accumulated dirt.

Descending into the bowels of the city of love, you will learn about the history of the development of the Paris sewerage network, see the ancient devices that were used to purify wastewater, get acquainted with in the latest ways water purification and protection of the city from floods. Tours are available only from April to October.

Museum of Montmartre

Montmartre has long been associated with bohemian life and is known far beyond the borders of Paris and France in general. The museum of the most festive district of Paris is located in the Rosimon mansion. This house was built for one of the actors from the troupe of Mohler - Claude Rose, who bore the pseudonym Rosimon. His stage name also passed to the house. Later, Renoir's workshop was located here at the very beginning of his creative career. Many famous French artists, actors and composers lived here. Four expositions are permanently exhibited. The first tells about the time when Montmartre was a small village. A separate exposition is devoted to the period of the Paris Commune.

The central section tells about the known period in the history of this area. It is called "Festive Montmartre". Most of the poets, artists and artists loved Montmartre very much and settled here with pleasure, not only because of the many fun places nearby, but also because amazing picturesque views opened from here, and housing prices were very low. There are many posters and posters by A. Toulouse-Lautrec, paintings and personal belongings of Van Gogh, Degas, Pissarro, costumes of cabaret dancers.

Carnavalet Museum

Almost the only one in the city dedicated to the history and secrets of Paris itself. It is located in an old mansion, which is quite remarkable in itself: a majestic entrance with bas-reliefs and the coat of arms of the first owners, allegorical scenes on the facade between the windows, a statue of the Sun King in the courtyard. It consists of several exhibition halls dedicated to a certain era in the history of the city. The most ancient period is represented by tools from the Late Stone Age, archaeological finds like funeral masks, mammoth tusks, etc.

In the following rooms you can see medieval interior items, images of saints and angels, family portraits of the owners of the mansion, Jewelry. Many historical interiors have been reconstructed here - for example, the bedroom of Marie Antoinette, several halls of the era of Louis XV, the rooms of the Riviera Hotel have been recreated. A separate room is dedicated to the history of the French Revolution. There are several models of guillotines, real keys to the Bastille and other artifacts. Modern times are represented by paintings, photographs and lithographs of the city of the 18th-19th centuries, posters of the first cabarets, art exhibitions.

Fashion Museum

It opened in 1977 in a building built at the end of the 19th century. Once this house belonged to the widow of General Gallier. She decided to transfer the entire rich collection of art objects that belonged to their family to the state. For this, a mansion was built in the late Renaissance style. But soon all the property was nationalized, and the house remained empty for a long time, until the Fashion and Textile Museum opened in it in 1977. Collected 70 thousand exhibits, including the clothes of the XVIII century, for example: the corsage of Marie Antoinette and several costumes that belonged to Louis XVII.

Josephine's dresses, Sarah Bernhardt's costumes, costume models from the Lafayette Gallery, etc. are stored here.
All these unique exhibits require special storage conditions, so they are exhibited only in temporary exhibitions. The fashion of the 20th century is the discovery of famous fashion houses, the work of the sisters Callo, Schiaparelli, Poiret and others. The end of the 40s and 50s - newlook and new images in the models of Dior, Chanel, Balenciaga. Separate expositions tell about the history of underwear from the 19th century to modern designs. A special section is devoted to how models were created and are being created: from the author's idea to implementation.

Delacroix Museum

Here are collected personal items and paintings of the artist. Here he lived from December 1857 until the end of his life. To preserve the legacy of the artist, in 1929 the Society of Friends of E. Delacroix was created. In 1952, it bought this house, studio and garden at the house, and in 1954 transferred it to the ownership of the state. The museum opened here in 1971.

Here are the paintings of the artist relating to different periods of his work, including attempts to create frescoes. His travel notes, souvenirs and sketches brought from a trip to Morocco, items from the artist's studio, photographs and letters from the artist are kept. In addition to the paintings of Delacroix himself, here you can see the works of his artist friends - Colin, Guet, Saint-Marcel and others.

Bourdelle House Museum

In the 1930s, on the site of the house of E. A. Bourdelle, who died in 1929, the construction of new houses was to begin. The entire heritage of the master during this period was concentrated in the hands of his wife and daughter, who did not always manage to resist the French authorities. They were helped by their spouses - entrepreneurs and patrons of art Theodore-Ernest Cognac and Marie-Louise Zhe. They bought this plot of land from the city authorities, thanks to which they were able to preserve the sculptor's art collection. The museum was opened here only after the end of the war, in 1949.

On the initiative of I. Bizardel, who at that time was the head of the Academy of Fine Arts, the Paris Mayor's Office decided to open the Bourdelle Museum in the workshop and garden, which the descendants of the sculptor donated to the city. The basis was the collection of the artist himself and his family - 200 art canvases, 800 sculptural works, sketches, documents and photographs. The house has preserved the historical atmosphere that developed during the life of Bourdelle, many items that belonged to his family, but main value These are the work of the master himself.

Medieval Museum or Cluny Museum

Once upon a time, Roman baths were located on this place. Later, in the 14th century, a city ​​residence abbey of Cluny, then the building was rebuilt by one of the abbots of this order. In 1793 the house was nationalized and for a very long period it was used for completely different needs. In 1833, Alexander du Sommer placed his private collection in the mansion. In 1842, after his death, the family gave this collection to the state.

You can start your tour from the Roman baths of the 3rd century. They symbolize the unity and interconnection of these two eras. You can look at ancient sculptures, a collection of tapestries, including the famous "Lady with a Unicorn", samples of medieval fabrics and tapestries, jewelry and stained glass windows are presented separately.

Museum of Relief Plans

It will be of interest to everyone who in childhood built match fortresses or paper cities. Not only historians, surveyors and architects will want to see a small copy of the sinister If Castle or Luxembourg and examine everything in great detail. It was opened in 1953, and now it stores 100 layouts, but usually no more than 28 are exhibited. Sections of the exposition are devoted to certain geographical regions of the country. Creation of relief plans for bastions, cities and the area next to them in France began under Louis XIV.

Already in the 17th century, 150 models of various fortresses and castles and their environs were created from various parts of France and other states. The plans were made by the best military engineers and were a closely guarded state secret. They were kept in the Louvre under special supervision. In the 20s of the last century, they ceased to have their military significance and became simply a historical value. You can see miniatures of fortresses and castles located in different parts of the country.

Museum of Man

It was founded in 1937 by Paul Rivet. Over time, it turned into a research center and became part of the National Museum of Natural History. Throughout the existence of the museum, its collections have changed periodically. Now four expositions are constantly presented, illustrating all stages of development human society in general and the person himself. The first tells about the development of man, considering certain periods and individual stages. The second reflects the problems of population growth on the planet, and the third shows genetic diversity and its impact on society.

The fourth exposition is devoted to ethnographic studies of Africa, Asia, America and the Arctic. This is not just an exhibition, but a full-fledged scientific center, whose specialists are engaged in the study of global problems, for example: human adaptation to environment and the influence of the environment on its development, as well as the influence of the person himself on the nature and consequences of these interventions, the prediction of the biological development of a person, etc.

Grand Gallery of Evolution

On four floors with a total area of ​​6000 sq. m housed a collection that illustrates the origin and development of life on our planet. The Grand Gallery of Evolution is also part of the National Museum of Natural History. All exhibits are arranged in the sequence in which, according to Charles Darwin, they appeared on Earth. On the ground floor there are skeletons and stuffed underwater inhabitants. On the second, terrestrial animals are placed in accordance with their habitat - in natural areas. The exposition of the third floor tells about the influence of man on the natural world.

Here you can also get acquainted with the forecasts of scientists about the future of life on the planet. The fourth floor is devoted directly to evolution: how life on Earth came from single-celled organisms to such a variety of forms. One can see how heredity and natural selection influence the development of life; find out what discoveries in this area have been made by scientists in our time. A separate room tells about the extinct species of animals and plants, and those that are now on the verge of extinction.

Music Museum

In 1995, by order of the Ministry of Culture of France, an unusual enterprise was created - Muzykograd. In 1997, the Museum of Music was opened under him. Here you can see unique musical instruments - from the most ancient to the latest, learn the history of the development of music in France and around the world, listen to concerts and lectures. The exposition is based on a collection that has been collected over several decades at the National Conservatory. You can not only see ancient musical instruments, but also listen to how they sound, including the famous Stradivari and Guarneri violins. The first hall is dedicated to the history of the birth of the opera genre, the first balls and ballets of Versailles.

The next section takes visitors to the Age of Enlightenment, the heyday of classicism, and then the great period of romanticism awaits you, music XIX century, the heyday of opera in Italy, France and Germany. The furious 20th century, with all its complexity, inconsistency and tragedy, reflected in the music of this time, is devoted to the fourth section of the exposition. Story musical styles and genres of the peoples of America, Asia and Africa, another part of Europe is considered in the next room. New trends in music that have become popular in the last century: jazz, blues, rock and others are presented in a temporary exhibition, which is planned to have a separate permanent hall in the future.

Wine Museum

Once Paris, like other major European cities, was surrounded by a ring of monasteries. The monks who lived there owned large tracts of land planted with vineyards. Naturally, over time, they began to make wine of various varieties from the harvest. Greatest Success soon achieved the monks from the monastery of Passy. Barrels of wine were stored in the cellars of the monastery, which was highly valued, for example, by Louis XIII himself. The same wine was supplied not only to the royal court, but also to the table of most aristocratic families. However, later the affairs of the monastery fell into decay. It was looted and destroyed. In the 80s of the last century, one of the owners of a Parisian restaurant remembered the winemakers from the monastery of Passy, ​​whose cellars were approximately under his restaurant.

He decided to dig them up and set up an exhibition and tasting room here. The cellars were completely restored, and since 1984 a wine museum has been opened in the former catacombs. Everyone who wants to first get acquainted with the history of winemaking, its traditions. Of course, the ancient wine that the monks treated Louis did not survive in the cellars, but here you can see ancient bottles, ceramic dishes for wine, and metal glasses. Special installations are devoted to scenes related to the drinking of French wine by famous people. At the end of the tour, you can try modern varieties and buy a few bottles of your favorite drink.

Museum of Romantic Life

The building that now houses the museum was built in 1830. Immediately after the construction, Ari Schaeffer, an artist who served at the court of the Prince of Orleans, moved into it. Friday evenings in the artist's house were visited by famous musicians, artists and writers. Chopin and Liszt played here, Pauline Viardot sang, George Sand, Charles Dickens, Turgenev and other famous contemporaries of the artist often visited here.
The museum was founded by the descendants of Ari Schaeffer, and for a long time it remained private, until in 1983 the entire collection was transferred to the state. One of the departments of the museum is entirely dedicated to George Sand.

Here, on the ground floor of the mansion, even the interior of the Noan estate, where the famous writer loved to spend time with her loved ones, has been restored. Several rooms contain things that belonged to her, portraits of her family members, watercolors painted by George Sand and her son. A cast of F. Chopin's hand, which was made during the composer's lifetime, is also kept here. The second floor is dedicated to Schaeffer's life. His paintings are collected here and the life of the court painter is restored.

Museum of Fair Art

Founded in 1972 by actor and antiquary J.-P. Fawan. Since 1996, the museum has occupied pavilions former market in Bercy, which was built in the 19th century. To create his own museum and restore the exhibits of J.-P. Fawan spent 35 years. Here are collected 14 real big attractions, 16 tents that house slot machines, 18 sets for organizing real performances - all exhibits are authentic and take visitors into the real whirlwind of Parisian fairs from the middle of the 19th century to the 50s of the past. And another one and a half thousand exhibits are stored in storerooms. The entire collection is presented in three thematic sections.

Venetian - creates the atmosphere of a carnival city: famous canals and bridges, gondolas, comedy dell'arte performed by mechanical puppets of the last century. In the Magic Theater you can see a visual show - the so-called "living pictures", to the music performed by a mechanical orchestra of the 19th century. The performances traditionally involve aerialists, magicians and, of course, mimes. Performances are often held in the Green Garden. The trees in it are illuminated with lamps and garlands. There are sculptures in the garden fairytale heroes, Carroll characters, street musicians.

Museum Jacquemart-André

At the origins of this unusual art gallery worth a collection of works of art, jewelry and antique tapestries Edouard Andre - the heir to a successful family of French bankers, who spent most of his fortune on the acquisition of art. A few years later he married the artist Nellie Jacquemart. The couple traveled a lot and always brought art paintings and sculptures from trips that could decorate their mansion in Paris. After the death of the spouses, the entire collection was transferred to the Institute of France, and on its basis this museum was opened in 1913.

There are five exhibition halls in which Renaissance paintings by Italian, Flemish and French artists are presented. Ballrooms and music halls are decorated with sculptures, and the walls are decorated with red brocade. In the library, in addition to paintings by Rembrandt, van Eyck and others Flemish artists, collected samples brought by the spouses from Egypt. Italian hall are decorated with paintings by Italian artists beloved by their spouses. The pearl of this collection is Botticelli's Madonna and Child.

Museum of Mineralogy

It was opened in 1794 at the National School of Mines. R-J Gayuy took part in its creation. The first expositions were based on collections from private collections, which were collected by outstanding French mineralogists. IN early XIX century, the museum moved to the Vendôme mansion. Throughout this century, the collection has been replenished from private collections and samples brought from geological expeditions and mining around the world. Today there are more than 100 thousand exhibits in the funds. Around 4,000 are constantly exhibited. There is a wide variety here precious stones, meteorites and other minerals of extraterrestrial origin.

Separate halls are devoted to the history of mineralogy and outstanding French geologists. The interactive system allows you to get additional information about each stone. The showcases of room L are dedicated to the history of jewelry in France. The jewels of crowned persons are kept here: weapons, bracelets, tiaras and other jewelry. A special room is devoted to artificial minerals, as well as asteroids and meteorites, including a huge Martian meteorite, which was discovered in 2014 in the Sahara.

Use the services of kiwitaxi and at the airport, at the specified time, the driver will be waiting for you, help with luggage and promptly take you to the hotel. Several classes of cars are available - from economy to Minibus with 19 seats. The price is fixed and does not depend on the number of passengers and the address within Paris. Taxi from / to the airport is a convenient and comfortable way to get to the right place.

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