Musée Jacquemart-André
Recently reopened after a year-long renovation, the Musée Jacquemart-André is a time-capsule treasure. Designed in the 19th century during Haussmann’s Paris Plan, the architectural wizardry of the double helix staircase and a ballroom with collapsable walls to accommodate up to 1,000 guests was groundbreaking then and continues to impress now. The salons and apartments are exquisite, each filled with paintings, sculptures and porcelain treasures meticulously collected by banking heir Edouard André and his artist wife, Nélie Jacquemart, during their lives. The reopening exhibition features 40 masterpieces from the Borghese Gallery in Rome, including Bernini bronzes and oils by the 16th- and 17th-century Italian big hitters Botticelli, Caravaggio, Titian and Raphael. This is a rare chance to see these artworks outside Italy, and the exhibition is a glorious add-on to the permanent collection.
In the know: From 21 September to 17 December 2024, the museum is hosting a ‘travelling’ opera adaptation of Verdi’s La traviata on selected evenings. During the interval, guests can tour the museum’s prestigious permanent collection, Champagne in hand.
Photo credit – Culturespaces / Sophie Lloyd