The best museums to visit in Paris

Musée Marmottan Monet is the former headquarters of Francois Christophe Edmund Keelaman, Duke of Valmi, in Basi, was absorbed in Paris after the French Revolution. The property consists of a major building and two wings. The Duke died in 1868, and his widow and daughter were sold in 1882 to the Industrial and Art Mosque, Jul Marmotan, which mainly collected paintings by the Italian, Flemish and German primitive. In 1883, Marmotta’s treasures moved to his only son, Paul, who then devoted himself to the study of history, especially those in the era of Napoleon, and the gathering of relevant art, including the demolition of marble from the Emperor family, family furniture and family skull. Académie Des Beaux-Arts, which he managed in 1932.
Musée Marmottan was opened in 1934, and his affiliation with academic donations that included works by French academic painter William Adolf Buyu and nature painter Gul Bastian Lebej. The donations presented by Victorine Donop de Monchi, daughter of the George de Bilio Mosque, took the group in a new direction with the addition of the first impressionist paintings, including the works of Camel Besaro, Pierre Augusta Renoir, and Alfred Cesley, as well as Claude Monette 1872 plate 1872 Impression, sunrise.
Another will has turned the museum’s holdings that Michel Monet, the youngest son of the painter; It was donated in 1966, and it consisted of more than a hundred works by the impressionist father, including a range of wide range Water lilies. Hence the current name of the Foundation, Musée Marmottan Monet. Thanks to the Rouart family, the museum now includes the first group of the world’s works by their ancestors, the Berthe Morisot, along with the drawings and paintings written by Edouard Manet, Edgar Diga, and Jean-Pope-Kamil Corot, forever the reconciliation of academic circles with the impression, a preliminary movement that was not cheerful for its inconsistency.