The Petit Palais




Built for the World Fair of 1900, the building shelters today part of the artistic collections of the Town of Paris. In its sumptuous rooms with the ceilings decorated with paintings and sculptures, the museum, entièrelment renovated in 2005, gathers especially major works of the XIXe century: Géricault, Ingres, Billhook (“Young ladies of the Edges of the Seine” and “the Sleep”), Gilded, Manet, Monet… An important museum whose permanent collections remain too ignored of the public.

The Petit Palais is a museum in Paris. Built for the Universal Exhibition in 1900 by architect Charles Girault, it now houses the Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris. Arranged around a pretty semi-circular courtyard and garden, the palace is similar to the Grand Palais. Its ionic columns, grand porch and dome echo those of the Invalides across the river. The current exhibits are divided into sections: The Dutuit Collection of Medieval and Renaissance paintings, drawings and objets d'art; the Tuck Collection of 18th century furniture and the City of Paris collection of works by French artists, such as Jean Ingres, Eugène Delacroix and Gustave Courbet. It served as model notably for Royal Museum for Central Africa near Brussels.