Anne de Beaujeu Museum
Musée Anne-de-Beaujeu | |
Established | 5 June 1910 |
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Location | 3 Place du Colonel Laussedat |
Website | musees |
The Anne de Beaujeu Museum (French: Musée Anne-de-Beaujeu) is a departmental museum of art and history, established since 1910 in the Renaissance pavilion of the Palais des Ducs de Bourbon in Moulins, Allier, in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region. It adjoins the Maison Mantin, named after the collector Louis Mantin (1851–1905), a reflection of a bourgeois dwelling at the end of the 19th century.
The museum's collections are divided into five main themes. The museum's collections bring together some 20,000 works, artifacts, archaeological finds, coins and medals, weapons and a natural history fund.
The museum is named after Anne of France (1461–1522), the daughter of Louis XI, who became Anne de Beaujeu by her union with the Duke of Bourbon Pierre de Beaujeu.
19th century painting and sculpture
[edit]The museum's rich art collection of the second half of the 19th century contains works by Jean-Léon Gérôme, Jean-Paul Laurens, Ernest Meissonier, Alexandre Cabanel, Georges-Antoine Rochegrosse, and Jean-Jacques Henner. It includes:
- Truth Coming Out of Her Well, Jean-Léon Gérôme, oil on canvas (1896);
- Le Matin de Castiglione, Ernest Meissonier, oil on canvas (1891);
- The Men of Holy Office, Jean-Paul Laurens, oil on canvas (1889);
- Salammbô, Georges Rochegrosse, oil on canvas (1886).
- Le Bal des ardents, Georges Rochegrosse, oil on canvas 11(1889).
- Venus to the change of Pâris, Émile Thomas, sculpture (1868); transfer of the state.
- Adam and Eve, Fernand Pelez (1876); transfer of the state.
- Portrait of a woman, called Jew with fur, Marcellin Desboutin, oil on canvas (1882); transfer of the State.