Fernand Léger National Museum
art museum in France primarily showing Fernand Léger
About Fernand Léger National Museum
The Fernand Léger National Museum (French: Musée national Fernand Léger) is a museum in Biot, Alpes-Maritimes, in south-eastern France, dedicated to the work of the twentieth-century artist Fernand Léger. Although originally privately owned, it is now a state museum entitled to style itself Musée de France. History In 1955, Fernand Léger bought a villa in Biot, called Mas Saint-André, with the intention of installing polychrome ceramic sculptures in his garden, but died soon afterwards. The museum was built on the property after the death of the artist in 1955 by Nadia Léger and Georges Bauquier, to designs by the architect Andreï Svetchine; an earlier design by Paul Nelson had been rejected. Construction began in 1957, and the museum opened in 1960. The gardens were designed by Henri Fish and contain sculptures based on Léger's work.
Description via Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Source: Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
Image: Wikimedia Commons.
Plan your visit
art museum in France primarily showing Fernand Léger
- Address
- 255 Chemin du Val de Pome Get directions
- Founded
- 1960
- Annual visitors
- 32,057
Works from Fernand Léger National Museum
No works from this venue are available on the web yet.