Opened 1694 Artwork Deposition of Christ | Phone +33 3 81 87 80 67 | |
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Address 1 Place de la Révolution, 25000 Besançon, France Similar Musée du temps, Citadel of Besançon, musée Calvet, Musée Courbet, Besançon Cathedral Profiles |
Le mus e des beaux arts et d arch ologie de besan on en chantier
The Musée des Beaux-Arts et d'archéologie (Museum of Fine Arts and Archeology) in the French city of Besançon is the oldest public museum in France. It was set up in 1694, nearly a century before the Louvre became a public museum.
Contents
- Le mus e des beaux arts et d arch ologie de besan on en chantier
- Collections
- Archaeology
- Drawing cabinet
- Painting
- Origin of the collections
- Building
- References
Collections
The collections of the Musée des Beaux-Arts et d'archéologie de Besançon are divided in three categories: archaeology, painting, and drawing cabinet.
Archaeology
(Kupfer-Legierung)
Drawing cabinet
Painting
The collections shows the main tendencies and evolutions of European art from the 14th to 20th centuries:
Origin of the collections
The collections of the museum mostly originated in four gifts. In 1694, Abbot Boisot gave his collection (manuscripts, printed books, medals, eleven paintings and four busts coming from the Granvelle family) to the town's Benidictine monks, on the condition that the public had access to these collections twice a week. This bibliothèque-musée Boisot (Boisot Library-Museum) lasted for the whole of the 18th century. In 1819 Pierre-Adrien Pâris, the King's architect, added his collection (38 paintings and 183 drawings including those of Fragonard). Jean Gigoux gave the museum his collection in 1894 (over 3000 drawings and 460 paintings of Spanish, English, Northern and German schools), and finally George Besson and his wife gave the museum their collection in 1960 (112 paintings and 220 modern and contemporary drawings).
Building
Since 1843, the museum has been located in a former grain hall, in the center of the town. The building became too small following Besson's donation, it was rebuilt from 1967 to 1970 by Louis Miquel, a student of Le Corbusier. The interior courtyard was covered with a concrete structure.