musée de l'École de Nancy
museum in France
About musée de l'École de Nancy
The Musée de l'École de Nancy is a museum devoted to the École de Nancy, an Art Nouveau movement founded in 1901 by Émile Gallé, Victor Prouvé, Louis Majorelle, Antonin Daum and Eugène Vallin in the city of Nancy in Lorraine, north-eastern France. They were joined by other artists, notably the stained glass artist Jacques Grüber and the painter Michel-Auguste Colle. The museum, opened in 1964, is set in the former house of a patron of the École de Nancy, Eugène Corbin. The architect was Lucien Weissenburger. It has a garden, an aquarium pavilion, and the main building contains works by all the major Art Nouveau artists of Nancy, which.
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
museum in France
- Address
- 38 Rue du Sergent Blandan Get directions
- Opening hours
- We-Su 10:00-18:00
- Admission
- yes
- Accessibility
- Not wheelchair accessible
- Founded
- 1964
- Annual visitors
- 52,000
Works from musée de l'École de Nancy
No works from this venue are available on the web yet.