Bye. Take one more look at that thing before you go


The free Treasure Gallery in Paris

The museum collection contains more than 10,000 modern works of art from the 20th and 21st centuries. The treasure of the museum is the U-shaped mural created by Room Dufyin 1937, which tells the story of the electric revolution through two themes. The interface is very interesting and interactive

The Musee d'Art Moderne de Paris is a modern museum located across the Seine River from the Eiffel Tower. If you've already visited the Louvre, the Orsay, and the Pompidou, be sure to check out this gallery, which is free to the public.

Here is French artist Raoul Dufy's epic "La Fee Electricite."
10 meters high and 60 meters long, it is the treasure of the town museum of Modern Art in Paris.



This work was created at the 1937 World Fair "Art and Technology in the Modern World" in Paris. Through ingenious ideas, artists combine past and present, fables and historical stories, natural scenery and technology. A clever blend. In it, both the visual impact of color and the content of the picture are extremely shocking.

It is worth mentioning that the VR interactive equipment in this venue can use the ipad at the entrance to find the corresponding details of the painting and scan it. After success, the ipad will appear animation and other scenes, and help the audience discover more stories in the painting through each other.

In addition, there are a large number of works worth punch-in, such as French artist Robert Delaunay's huge Rythme n°1 standing in front of the famous Eiffel Tower series, through the next window can see the window across the Seine River tower.
As well,Henri Matisee's huge La Danse, French conceptual art, and minimalist artist Daniel Buren's Murs de peintures, among others...

In addition to the permanent exhibition, there will also be temporary exhibitions in the museum, and the current exhibition is a large-scale retrospective of the artist Jean Helion. Group exhibitions of contemporary Arab artists are well worth checking out.

The Centre Pompidou

The Pompidou Centre's primary colours, exposed ducts and ventilation ducts make it one of the most famous attractions in the French capital. Known simply by locals as "The Boburg" because of its location, the Pompidou's collection of modern art is the largest in Europe, rivaled only by New York's Museum of Modern Art in terms of breadth and quality.

When it first opened in 1977, the idea of combining a modern art museum, library, exhibition and performance space, and cinema in one mixed-use complex was revolutionary, but it paved the way for most art institutions around the world.

It is rumored that the Pompidou Art Center will do a five-year closed-door renovation at the end of 2024 or early next year, in line with the mood of coming to the last bus to strengthen the artistic and cultural literacy.

After arriving, go directly to the ticket-free channel to go through security check and buy tickets. All the Galeries tickets selected are 18 euros, and this one is recommended. The cheaper 15 euros only includes 2 permanent Galerie exhibition areas.


After buying the ticket to the sixth floor, a view gallery is very good, you can see the Eiffel Tower and Montmartre Highland, overlooking the Paris city;
The sixth floor is the temporary exhibition area Galerie 1 and 2, which is very immersive, and it feels like you can walk all day on the sixth floor alone. I liked the French manga in it and saw the Doraemon manuscript. A lot of French people are sitting quietly inside looking at the works.

The fifth and fourth floors are permanent exhibition halls, and museum passes are available.
On the fifth floor is Musee, a modern art exhibition hall with a collection of Picasso, Dali and Chagall. In terms of artistic genres, the exhibition hall covers Fauvism, abstraction, surrealism and pop art. Check out the treasures: a girl in a Roman shirt, Frida's self-portrait, and the most beautiful Chagall collection.

On the fourth floor is the contemporary Art gallery, which is also large (bathrooms are clean and free) and showcases collections from 1960 to the present, not just paintings and sculptures, but also architecture and installation art. Then go to the first floor of Galerie 3& 4, the theme of the home exhibition, this part of the glance. Before you go, you can take photos on the self-service camera on the first floor. After ten seconds of countdown, you can choose not to print, and you can send it to the mailbox for free, together with your favorite works.

Related recommendations

HI! Please log in
Register as a member and enjoy the privilege of downloading full site resources.

User Login

Register Account