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Est. Paris, France The Complete Visitor's Resource
The Complete Directory

Museums of Paris

From the grand institutions of the Seine to intimate maisons-musées tucked in Montmartre — the full spectrum of Parisian cultural heritage.

The Great Collections

Major Art Museums

Institutions of international significance whose collections span civilisations and centuries.

The Louvre pyramid illuminated at night
World Art · Antiquity · Renaissance

Musée du Louvre

The world's most visited museum, set inside an 800-year-old fortress. The permanent collection spans prehistoric antiquity to the 19th century across 72,735 square metres of exhibition space. Essential highlights include the Denon Wing's Salle des États, the Richelieu Wing's French sculpture, and the remarkable Mesopotamian galleries — often overlooked by those rushing toward the Mona Lisa.

📍 Rue de Rivoli, 1st ⏱ 3–5 hours minimum
Interior clock of Musée d'Orsay
Impressionism · Post-Impressionism

Musée d'Orsay

The former Gare d'Orsay — built for the 1900 Universal Exhibition — was rescued from demolition in 1977 and transformed into one of the world's great museum spaces. The top floor's Impressionist galleries offer the single most concentrated encounter with 19th-century painting available anywhere: Monet's series paintings, Seurat's pointillist canvases, Van Gogh's self-portraits, and Cézanne's late still lifes, all bathed in natural light.

📍 1 Rue de la Légion d'Honneur, 7th ⏱ 2–4 hours
Exterior pipes of Centre Pompidou
Modern & Contemporary Art

Centre Pompidou (Beaubourg)

Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers's inside-out building — its coloured ducts and escalators worn proudly on the outside — remains as radical today as when it opened in 1977. The Musée National d'Art Moderne within holds Europe's largest collection of 20th and 21st-century art: approximately 120,000 works, with around 14,000 on permanent display. The rooftop terrace offers one of the finest panoramas in Paris.

📍 Place Georges-Pompidou, 4th ⏱ 2–3 hours
Rodin's The Thinker sculpture
Sculpture · Belle Époque

Musée Rodin

Auguste Rodin lived and worked in the Hôtel Biron — an 18th-century mansion whose owners included Matisse and Rilke — from 1908 until his death in 1917. The museum preserves both the building and its walled garden as he knew them. The outdoor garden, where The Thinker stands in dialogue with The Burghers of Calais and the towering Gates of Hell, is one of the most atmospheric sculptural spaces in Europe.

📍 77 Rue de Varenne, 7th ⏱ 1.5–2 hours
Picasso painting blue period
Picasso · Cubism

Musée Picasso Paris

The Hôtel Salé in the Marais — a 17th-century tax-collector's mansion of considerable grandeur — now houses the state's inheritance from Picasso's estate: over 5,000 works spanning the entire trajectory of his career, from the Blue Period through Cubism to the final canvases of the 1970s. No other institution offers such a comprehensive survey of a single artist's output.

📍 5 Rue de Thorigny, 3rd ⏱ 1.5–2.5 hours
Waterlilies painting Monet
Monet · Impressionism

Musée de l'Orangerie

Built in 1852 as a greenhouse for the Tuileries oranges, the Orangerie was redesigned in 1927 to receive Monet's bequest: eight monumental Nymphéas panels — the Water Lilies cycle — installed in two purpose-built oval rooms flooded with diffused natural light. It is among the most extraordinary experiences available to a visitor in Paris: painting as total environment, as meditation on time and water.

📍 Jardin des Tuileries, 1st ⏱ 1–1.5 hours
Beyond the Obvious

Hidden Gems & Specialist Museums

Paris rewards those willing to explore beyond the most-visited institutions.

Monet · Marmottan Collection

Musée Marmottan Monet

The Marmottan holds the world's largest Monet collection — over 300 works — including the famous Impression, Sunrise (1872), the painting that gave Impressionism its name. Set in a Bois de Boulogne hunting lodge, it is less crowded than the Orangerie and equally essential.

📍 2 Rue Louis Boilly, 16th⏱ 1.5 hours
Contemporary · Experimental

Palais de Tokyo

Unlike its neighbour the Musée d'Art Moderne, Palais de Tokyo has no permanent collection — it exists purely as a space for contemporary creation. Its stripped-back industrial aesthetic and deliberately provisional installations make it one of the most genuinely unpredictable museum experiences in Europe. Open until midnight.

📍 13 Ave du Président Wilson, 16th⏱ 1.5–2 hours
Middle Ages · Medieval Art

Musée de Cluny

Built over the ruins of 3rd-century Gallo-Roman thermal baths, the Cluny houses France's national collection of medieval art. The highlight — the six tapestries of La Dame à la Licorne (The Lady and the Unicorn, c.1500) — is one of the most haunting works of art in any museum anywhere. The Romanesque building itself is extraordinary.

📍 28 Rue du Sommerard, 5th⏱ 1.5 hours
Fashion · Couture · Textiles

Palais Galliera — Musée de la Mode

The dedicated fashion museum of Paris, housed in a 19th-century Italianate palace, holds 200,000 garments, accessories, and fashion documents from the 18th century to the present. Exhibitions rotate the collection thematically — a Balenciaga retrospective or a survey of Parisian street style — making every visit distinct.

📍 10 Ave Pierre 1er de Serbie, 16th⏱ 1.5 hours
Music · Instruments · Sound

Cité de la Musique — Philharmonie de Paris

The Musée de la Musique within the Philharmonie holds 7,000 instruments and archival objects related to Western and world music from the 16th century onward. Interactive listening stations and extraordinary organological rarities make it essential for anyone interested in music history — and the adjacent concert halls are among the finest in the world.

📍 221 Ave Jean Jaurès, 19th⏱ 1.5–2 hours
Jewish Art & History

Musée d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaïsme

Housed in the Hôtel de Saint-Aignan in the Marais — historically the centre of Paris's Jewish community — the MAHJ traces the history and culture of Jewish communities in France and Europe through religious objects, manuscripts, art, and documentary material. The contemporary Jewish art collection is one of the finest in the world.

📍 71 Rue du Temple, 3rd⏱ 1.5–2 hours

The Paris Museum Dispatch

Occasional essays, seasonal guides, and editorial notes on Parisian culture.