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Musee Marmottan — Claude Monet
by Karen Plumley
For even those with the most casual interest in les beaux arts,
a visit to Paris cannot be considered complete without a glimpse of
what the city's innumerable museums have to offer. If you find the
lines at the Musee d'Orsay daunting, or are traveling with young ones
whose patience quickly evaporates in the crowds of the best-known
exhibitions, you can still experience the city's celebrated art scene
with a visit to the Musee Marmottan–Claude Monet.
Housed in a 19th-century mansion
on the edge of the Bois de Boulogne, the Musee Marmottan was formerly
the hunting lodge of Christophe Edmond Kellermann, Duke of Valmy,
before being sold in 1882 to Jules Marmottan. When Marmottan's son Paul
died in 1932, he left the house and the family's impressive art
collection to the Académie des Beaux-Arts, and the mansion was
opened two years later as the Musee Marmottan.
The museum remained relatively obscure until
1966, when Claude Monet's son Michel died in a car crash, leaving a
sizable bequest of his father's art to the small museum. With more than
130 paintings, watercolors, pastels and drawings, the Musee Marmottan
suddenly boasted the world's largest collection of works by Claude
Monet, and fans of the renowned Impressionist could now trace the
artist's evolving technique over the span of his career in a single
museum.
Along with the Monets, the museum plays host to a comprehensive collection of First Empire furniture and objets d'arts,
works by German, Flemish and Italian primitive painters, Renaissance
tapestries, and numerous Impressionist and Post-impressionist works by
artists such as Degas, Gaugin, Manet, Pissaro, Renoir, Rodin and
Sisley.
The museum also features an on-site gift
shop offering art-related books, posters, prints, cards and calendars,
as well as jewelry, scarves, decorative items for the home and creative
items for children.
A visit to Musee Marmottan—comfortably off the beaten track but still accessible in the bourgeois 16th
arrondissement—is an ideal way to introduce children to
Impressionism and a less-hectic alternative to the better-known
galleries.
If you go
The Musee Marmottan-Claude Monet is a short
walk from La Muette Metro. En route, enjoy a picnic in the Jardins du
Ranelagh, where children will delight in the Guignol — the French
equivalent of Punch and Judy — performed on Wednesday, Saturday
and Sunday afternoons between March and November.
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Hours:
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Tues-Sun 10am-6pm
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Address:
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2 rue Louis-Boilly, 16e
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Transportation:
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Métro: La Muette
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Phone:
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01-42-24-07-02
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Prices:
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Admission 6.50 € adults, 4 € ages 8-24, free for children 7 and under
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