What to do and see in Seine-Maritime, Normandy: The Best Art Museums

December 28, 2021 Mikaela Didonna

Discover the best top things to do in Seine-Maritime, France including Musee Mathon Durand, Musee des Beaux-Arts de Rouen, Musee Secq des Tournelles, Ceramics Museum (Musee de la Ceramique), Musee des Ivoires, Musee d’art Moderne Andre Malraux - MuMa, Musee Maison de L'Armateur, Centre d'Art Contemporain Matmut, Abbaye de Graville, Musee national de l'Education.
Restaurants in Seine-Maritime

1. Musee Mathon Durand

53 Grande rue Saint Pierre, 76270 Neufchatel en Bray France +33 2 35 93 06 55 [email protected] https://www.facebook.com/MuseeMathonDurand/
Excellent
75%
Good
25%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

5.0 based on 4 reviews

Musee Mathon Durand

Situated in a magnificent bourgeois house of the 16th century, discover the museum collections: archeology, regional ethnology, ceramic, furniture, military Art, numismatic… In the cellar was reconstituted a room dedicated to the oldest cheese of Normandy : the Neufchatel.

2. Musee des Beaux-Arts de Rouen

Esplanade Marcel Duchamp, 76000, Rouen France +33 2 35 71 28 40 [email protected] http://mbarouen.fr/fr
Excellent
52%
Good
38%
Satisfactory
9%
Poor
1%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 976 reviews

Musee des Beaux-Arts de Rouen

Reviewed By Bubbles73uk - Weedon Bec, United Kingdom

The Musee des Beaux-Arts at Rouen is one of the best provincial museums in France, so if you are in Rouen on a rainy day like I was (or even if it isn't raining!), I highly recommend setting aside a couple of hours for a visit. The Cathedral Notre-Dame in Rouen was a recurring subject for Monet when he lived in nearby Giverny, and this excellent museum displays one of these canvases, along with works by Gericault, Boudin, Sisley, Renoir, Caillebot, Delecroix and many others. The paintings collection is especially strong, but there are also many fine sculptures and objets d'art. The whole museum has a very modern and professional air. And it's free! Unbelievable for a museum of this quality.

3. Musee Secq des Tournelles

2 rue Jacques Villon, 76000, Rouen France +33 2 35 71 28 40 http://www.rouen-musees.fr
Excellent
66%
Good
28%
Satisfactory
5%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 238 reviews

Musee Secq des Tournelles

4. Ceramics Museum (Musee de la Ceramique)

1 rue Faucon, 76000, Rouen France +33 2 35 07 31 74 http://www.rouen-musees.com/
Excellent
45%
Good
45%
Satisfactory
8%
Poor
1%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 87 reviews

Ceramics Museum (Musee de la Ceramique)

Reviewed By ChrisM51 - Adelaide, Australia

I never expected to find such fine maijolica in Rouen - but they had a thriving industry and the museum has some lovely examples. The building itself is very fine and worth visiting in its own right.

5. Musee des Ivoires

8 Place du Marechal Joffre, 76190 Yvetot France +33 2 35 95 08 40 [email protected] http://www.plateaudecauxmaritime.com/patrimoine-culturel/musee-municipal-des-ivoires
Excellent
47%
Good
47%
Satisfactory
7%
Poor
0%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 15 reviews

Musee des Ivoires

6. Musee d’art Moderne Andre Malraux - MuMa

2 boulevard Clemenceau, 76600, Le Havre France +33 2 35 19 62 62 http://www.muma-lehavre.fr
Excellent
58%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
1%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 911 reviews

Musee d’art Moderne Andre Malraux - MuMa

The first thing you notice about the Musée d'art moderne André Malraux-MuMa Le Havre is its breathtaking coastal setting. As you approach the spacious, light-filled museum building, Henri-Georges Adam's monumental concrete sculpture The Signal heightens the experience, framing a slice of the maritime landscape that inspired many of the works in the museum's collections. Le Havre has nurtured artists like Monet, Dubuffet, Friesz, Dufy and Braque. And MuMa is a pillar of the city's art history. Inaugurated in 1961 by André Malraux, then France's Minister of Cultural Affairs, MuMa is known for its late-19th and 20th-century collections. From the Impressionists to the Fauves, the museum's collections have been enriched by gifts such as works from the studio of Eugène Boudin and the Marande donation. More recently, Hélène Senn-Foulds donated an impressive collection built up by her grandfather, Olivier Senn, in the early 20th century. Thanks to the donation, MuMa's collection of Impressionist works is today one of France's largest, and the public can now enjoy works by Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Degas, Courbet and Corot.

Reviewed By Kris1230 - West Chester, United States

The first thing you notice about MuMa Le Havre is its breathtaking coastal setting. As you approach the spacious, light-filled museum building, Henri-Georges Adam’s monumental concrete sculpture The Signal heightens the experience, framing a slice of the maritime landscape that inspired many of the works in the museum’s collections.Le Havre has nurtured artists like Monet, Dubuffet, Friesz, Dufy and Braque. And MuMa is a pillar of the city's art history. Inaugurated in 1961 by André Malraux, then France's Minister of Cultural Affairs, MuMa is known for its late-19th and 20th-century collections. From the Impressionists to the Fauves, the museum's collections have been enriched by gifts such as works from the studio of Eugène Boudin and the Marande donation. More recently, Hélène Senn-Foulds donated an impressive collection built up by her grandfather, Olivier Senn, in the early 20th century. Thanks to the donation, MuMa's collection of Impressionist works is today one of France's largest, and the public can now enjoy works by Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Degas, Courbet and Corot. It is well worth a visit when in Le Havre

7. Musee Maison de L'Armateur

3 quai de l Ile, 76600, Le Havre France +33 2 35 19 09 85 http://www.lehavre.fr/annuaire-des-equipements/maison-de-larmateur
Excellent
59%
Good
36%
Satisfactory
4%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 222 reviews

Musee Maison de L'Armateur

Paul Michel Thibault (1735-1799), the architect of the fortifications and hydraulic engineer of the city of Le Havre, decided around 1790, to build a mansion in a wealthy and coveted district of the city. In 1800,Martin Pierre Foache (1728-1816), a wealthy merchant, bought the house for use as a winter residence and to install his trading office there. He called another architect, Pierre Adrien Paris, former designer for the king, to decorate the interior. The facade is typical of the architecture of The Louis XVI period. It is extremely carefully designed; the parquet flooring of rare and exotic wood adjoins stone-tiled floors with geometric designs. the rooms are laid out around a central octagonal light-well.

8. Centre d'Art Contemporain Matmut

425 rue du Chateau, 76480 Saint-Pierre-de-Varengeville France +33 2 35 05 61 73 http://www.matmutpourlesarts.fr/lieu/le-chateau.aspx
Excellent
63%
Good
34%
Satisfactory
0%
Poor
0%
Terrible
3%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 41 reviews

Centre d'Art Contemporain Matmut

9. Abbaye de Graville

53 rue de l Abbaye, 76600, Le Havre France +33 2 35 24 51 00 http://www.lehavre.fr/annuaire-des-equipements/abbaye-de-graville
Excellent
49%
Good
41%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
4%
Terrible
0%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 51 reviews

Abbaye de Graville

"You must climb the hill, crossing over the shadowy terraces with their yew and boxwood hedges, to reach Graville Abbey and appreciate its size, while feeling the wind coming off the channel and enjoying an unrivalled view over the city of Le Havre. Guillaume Malet de Graville, a companion of William the Conqueror, gave the site all of its grandeur after returning victoriously from the Battle of Hastings. The church that he built has the characteristics of Norman Romanesque architecture, with the exception of the Gothic choir. The conventual buildings (12th to 18th centuries), now a national museum, house one of the finest collections of mediaeval statuary in Normandy. Stone pieces, paintings, engravings and a variety of other ornaments and an astounding collection of more than 150 scale-model houses (1896-1936) complete the collection. In the gardens, a monumental statue of the Madonna and Child, known as the “Black Madonna”, is a popular site for prayer." - www.abbayes-normandie.com

10. Musee national de l'Education

185 rue Eau de Robec, 76000, Rouen France +33 2 35 07 66 61 [email protected] http://www.reseau-canope.fr/musee/
Excellent
60%
Good
33%
Satisfactory
6%
Poor
0%
Terrible
1%
Overall Ratings

4.5 based on 48 reviews

Musee national de l'Education

History of children's education since the 16th century, represented by an exceptional series of paintings, etchings, furniture and educational equipment. Reconstruction of a circa 1900's school room in a remarkable timber-frame house

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