Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tours

The Musée des Beaux-Arts de Tours (English: Museum of Fine Arts of Tours) is located in the bishop's former palace,[1] near the cathedral St. Gatien, where it has been since 1910.[2] It displays rich and varied collections, including that of painting which is one of the first in France both in quality and the diversity of the works presented.

Musée des beaux-arts de Tours
The Musée des beaux-arts de Tours
Map
Established4 March 1795
Location18, Place Francis Sicard, 37000 Tours
Coordinates47°23′43″N 0°41′42″E / 47.3952°N 0.6949°E / 47.3952; 0.6949
TypeArt museum
Websitewww.mba.tours.fr

Description

In the courtyard, there is a magnificent cedar of Lebanon[3] and a stuffed elephant in a building in front of the museum. This elephant was killed because of a bout of madness during a circus parade by the "Barnum & Bailey" circus in the streets of Tours on 10 June 1902.


The museum has over 12,000 works of which 1,000 are on show to the public.[4] On the ground floor, the museum has a room especially dedicated to Tours art of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.[5]

The museum was classified as a monument historique on 27 June 1983.[6]

Collections

The museum has a large and fairly homogeneous collection of paintings, which includes several masterpieces such as two paintings by Andrea Mantegna, from the predella of the San Zeno Altarpiece:

Photos

References