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MUSÉE MARMOTTAN MONET

Museum
4.4/5
67 review
Closed - Open to 10h00 Opening hours

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2, rue Louis-Boilly, 75016Paris, France Show on map
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2025
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2025

Museum housing one of the most important Impressionist collections in Paris, with some 100 masterpieces by Claude Monet

The Musée Marmottan Monet houses one of the most important Impressionist collections in Paris, with some one hundred masterpieces by Claude Monet and paintings that once belonged to the artist (Degas, Gauguin, Renoir, Sisley...). It also exhibits oils, pastels and watercolors by Berthe Morisot, as well as a whole range of objets d'art and paintings from the First Empire.

Nestled in the 16th arrondissement, the museum is housed in the former mansion of Paul Marmottan, an art historian, collector and patron of the arts (1856-1932), who specialized in the Consulate and the Empire. He bequeathed it to the Académie des Beaux-Arts, along with his own collection. The mansion, which became a museum in 1934, was once a hunting lodge belonging to the Duc de Valmy. As soon as it was acquired by Jules Marmottan (1829-1883), director of several French energy and transport companies, and father of Paul Marmottan, it housed his first collections, notably of medieval and Renaissance art. Later, Paul Marmottan gradually added early 19th-century paintings and marble effigies of members of the Napoleonic family from the Tuileries Palace and the Château de Portici in Naples.

From 1938 onwards, more recent works entered the museum thanks to various donations, not the least of which were drawings by Bouguereau, canvases by Baburen and, above all, paintings by major artists (Berthe Morisot, of course, but also Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley and Monet), including the famous "Impression, soleil levant" (1873-74) bequeathed in 1957. In 1966, the museum also received the collection of Michel Monet, the painter's son, while in 1993, the descendants of Berthe Morisot bequeathed their family collection to the museum, making the Musée Marmottan the world's leading repository of works by Monet and Morisot.

Today, the museum organizes regular temporary exhibitions, but its permanent collections can be visited all year round, and include a rich collection of medieval and Renaissance objects, some of them signed by masters such as Jean Perréal's fabulous "alchemist" (1516). Nineteenth-century art is naturally well represented, with works by Morisot, Eugène Grandin and Gustave Caillebotte to name but a few. Among the must-sees is "La fillette au jersey bleu", a superb pastel by Berthe Morisot (1886). You're sure to fall in love with the work during your visit.

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Members' reviews on MUSÉE MARMOTTAN MONET

4.4/5
67 reviews
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DiCh
Visited in october 2018
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Superbe musée dans un hôtel particulier du 16e.
LE musée dédié à Monet avec des tableaux extraordinaires du maître !
Musée bien plus intimiste que le Louvre.
Visited in april 2018
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Je vous recommande vivement la visite de ce musée et de ses superbes expositions.
bernardher
Visited in june 2017
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L'Hôtel et l'environnement très agréable, puis de très belles expositions temporaires ... et pour terminer les tableaux de Monet
fute_197644
Visited in march 2017
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Un excellent musée, à taille humaine, situé dans un environnement verdoyant et calme où l'on peut retrouver une expo temporaire (en ce moment Pissaro jusqu'au 2/07/17) généralement consacrée aux impressionnistes ; au sous-sol plusieurs magnifiques tableaux de C. Monet et à l'étage quelques toiles magnifiques de Berthe Morizot. Le bâtiment lui-même est charmant.
fute_150821
Visited in october 2015
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C'est un excellent petit musée beaucoup moins connu que le Louvre Orsay etc... et qui mérite le détour surtout pour les amateurs des impressionnistes . A part les enluminures , un de ses points fort c'est la collection Monet . Monet s'était faché avec le Louvre . Il avait légué ses oeuvres à un parent ( son neveu? ) à la condition que celui ci , à son tour les lègue à un autre musée que le Louvre . Ce fut Marmottant qui fut choisi . Celui ci s'enrichit en outre d'autres peintres impressionnistes . C'est aussi un musée qui se viste sans trop de fatigue en 1à2 heures

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