
L'histoire
The Musee d'Orsay was a railway station first. It opened beside the Seine in May 1900, rushed to completion for the World's Fair that filled Paris that summer. The architect Victor Laloux hid its iron train shed behind a dressed-stone front and set a hotel above the platforms, and it ran as the world's first electrified urban terminus, trains sliding in and out under the glass roof without smoke or steam.
The elegance was also its undoing. The platforms were too short for the longer trains that came into service, and by 1939 the main lines had left for other stations. For decades the Gare d'Orsay stood half-empty under threat of demolition, and Orson Welles shot much of his 1962 film of Kafka's The Trial in its abandoned halls. In 1978 the French state listed the building and chose to make it a museum.
It reopened in 1986, given over to French art made between 1848 and 1914, the span that holds Impressionism. Under the great glass vault you now find Manet's Olympia, Van Gogh's self-portraits, Degas's dancers and Monet's cathedrals, one of the world's greatest collections of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist art. High on the end wall, the station's original clock still faces the hall and tells visitors the time.
Collection
255 œuvres
Pommes et orangesPaul Cézanne, 1899
Camille Monet sur son lit de mortClaude Monet, 1879
L'Inondation à Port-MarlyAlfred Sisley, 1876
Hôpital Saint-Paul à Saint-Rémy-de-ProvenceVincent van Gogh, 1889
La Femme à la cafetièrePaul Cézanne, 1895
L'Orchestre de l'OpéraEdgar Degas, 1868
Lorenzo Pagans et Auguste De GasEdgar Degas, 1871
Le Pont de MaincyPaul Cézanne, 1879
Portrait d'Eugène BochVincent van Gogh, 1888
Portrait de Madame CharpentierPierre-Auguste Renoir, 1876
Portrait de Stéphane MallarméÉdouard Manet, 1876
Restaurant de la Sirène à AsnièresVincent van Gogh, 1887
Bergère avec son troupeauJean-François Millet, 1863
Le Pont du chemin de fer à ArgenteuilClaude Monet, 1874
Les Toits rouges, coin de village, effet d'hiverCamille Pissarro, 1877
Les Régates à MoleseyAlfred Sisley, 1874
Les Romains de la décadenceThomas Couture, 1847
Un coin de tableHenri Fantin-Latour, 1872
Vue du canal Saint-MartinAlfred Sisley, 1870
Femme à l'ombrelle tournée vers la gaucheClaude Monet, 1886
Une moderne OlympiaPaul Cézanne, 1873
Partie de bateauGustave Caillebotte, 1878
Le Jardin du docteur Gachet à AuversVincent van Gogh, 1890
Fritillaires couronne impériale dans un vase de cuivreVincent van Gogh, 1887
Gabrielle à la rosePierre-Auguste Renoir, 1911