Rating: 8,2/10 (504 votes) Museum of decorative arts (Musee des arts decoratifs) description and photos - France: Paris. Detailed information about the attraction. Description, photographs and a map showing the nearest significant objects. Title in English - Musee des arts decoratifs. Photo and descriptionThe Parisian Museum of Decorative Arts is located in the west wing of the Louvre, and this is no coincidence: for centuries the French lifestyle was considered high art. This museum is the only one in France, representing techniques and materials of decorative arts from the Middle Ages to the present. There are approximately 150,000 exhibits in its funds, of which visitors can see 6,000, exhibited according to the principle of chronology: the Middle Ages, Renaissance, XVII-XVIII centuries, XVIII-XIX centuries, Art Nouveau, Art Deco ... and so on to the present day. There are also thematic expositions - wood, jewelry, toys. The collection, placed here in 1905, mainly consists of furniture, dishes, carpets, glass, jewelry, clothes. All of this is worth seeing: Since the 17th century, France has set the tone for the development of European decorative arts. Here the "big style" of Louis XIV was born, Versailles defined the role of decor in the interior for a long time. France gave the world sophisticated techniques named after their creators - furniture maker Andre Charles Boulle, Tapestry dyer. France can be called a country of thoughtful decorative thinking, manifested in every little detail, in strengthening the principles of which great creators took part. The dominance of modernity in the first quarter of the 20th century is associated with the name of the genius Le Corbusier. The middle of the century gives magnificent ceramics by Leger and Picasso, carpets and posters by Dufy, stained glass windows by Matisse. The interiors of Paris airports, UNESCO meeting rooms, and the Paris Radio House are decorated by outstanding decorators and applied artists. The Museum of Decorative Arts is part of the nationwide organization Les Arts Decoratifs (Decorative Arts), created in 1882, after the Paris World Exhibition, to preserve the works created in this area. The museum can be seen in all consider objects of different eras in details: hairpins for ties, doll houses, the first wallpaper. And next to it, for example, is the recreated interior of the bedroom of the courtesan Lucy Emilie Delabin, whose luxurious bed was described by Emile Zola in the novel Nana. We also recommend reading Stockholm Royal Palace (Kungliga slottet) description and photos - Sweden: Stockholm Topic: Museum of decorative arts (Musee des arts decoratifs) description and photos - France: Paris. |