Le palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille est un musée municipal d'art et d'antiquités situé place de la République à Lille, dans la région Hauts-de-France. C'est l’un des plus grands musées de France et le plus grand musée des beaux-arts, en dehors de Paris, en nombre d'œuvres exposées. Créé en 1792 sous l'impulsion du peintre Louis Joseph Watteau, le fonds initial du musée est constitué d'œuvres confisquées aux émigrés et aux institutions religieuses de la ville au lendemain de la Révolution, parmi lesquelles plusieurs tableaux de Rubens, Van Dyck ou Jordaens. En 1803, il s'enrichit d’œuvres données par l'État, conformément aux dispositions du décret Chaptal, à l'origine de la création de nombreux musées de province ; en 1809, le musée ouvre au public. Si l'État reste ensuite un contributeur important aux collections du musée, ce sont surtout les legs et donations, à partir des années 1850, qui conduisent à la constitution du fonds actuel. En 1881, la collection de tableaux atteint une dimension telle que Géry Legrand, maire de Lille, décide la construction d'un palais des beaux-arts pour les accueillir. La réouverture du musée, en 1892 dans ce nouveau bâtiment, offre l'occasion de regrouper plusieurs collections de peintures, et aussi de sculptures, de dessins, de pièces anciennes et d'objets d'art, jusqu'alors dispersées. Les acquisitions de la ville sont par ailleurs très dynamiques jusqu'à la veille de la Première Guerre mondiale. Elles comprennent quelques œuvres majeures, de David, Goya, Delacroix, Courbet, Corot ou Puvis de Chavannes, dont certaines ont marqué l'histoire de la peinture, mais surtout des œuvres anciennes ou contemporaines d'artistes d'origine régionale et locale qui viennent compléter les autres formes d'apports. Il en résulte des collections où les pièces flamandes et hollandaises du XVe au XVIIe siècle et françaises du XIXe siècle tiennent une place de tout premier rang. Tirées d'un fonds de plus de soixante-dix mille œuvres, le musée en propose aujourd'hui près de deux mille à la visite. Ce sont en particulier deux cents pièces de sculptures, de peintures et d’objets d’art de l’Europe médiévale et de la Renaissance, plus de cinq cents œuvres peintes du XVIe au XXe siècle, quelque cent trente-cinq sculptures du XIXe siècle, une belle collection de céramiques du XVIe au début du XXe siècle et quinze plans-reliefs au 1/600e de villes fortifiées par Vauban. Le musée possède également un cabinet des dessins riche de six mille cinq cents feuilles de dessins et d'estampes du XVe au XXe siècle et une collection numismatique de plusieurs milliers de pièces et médailles, ainsi que deux cent cinquante matrices de sceaux allant du XIIIe au XIXe siècle. Rénové entre 1991 et 1997, le musée accueille aussi une salle d'expositions temporaires, un auditorium, une bibliothèque et des ateliers pédagogiques. Le palais des Beaux-Arts lui-même a été inscrit à l'inventaire des monuments historiques en 1975.

Nearby Places View Menu
Location Image
41 m

Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille

The Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille (Lille Palace of Fine Arts) is a municipal museum dedicated to fine arts, modern art, and antiquities located in Lille. It is one of the largest art museums in France. It was one of the first museums built in France, established under the instructions of Napoleon I at the beginning of the 19th century as part of the popularisation of art. Jean-Antoine Chaptal's decree of 1801 selected fifteen French cities (among them Lille) to receive the works seized from churches and from the European territories occupied by the armies of Revolutionary France. The painters Louis Joseph Watteau and François-Louis-Joseph Watteau, known as the "Watteau of Lille", were heavily involved in the museum's beginnings - Louis Joseph Watteau made in 1795 the first inventory of the paintings confiscated during the Revolution, whilst his son François was deputy curator of the museum from 1808 to 1823. The museum opened in 1809 and was initially housed in a church confiscated from the Récollets before being transferred to the city's town hall. In 1866, the "musée Wicar", formed from the collection of Jean-Baptiste Wicar, was merged into the Palais des Beaux-Arts. Construction of the Palais's current Baroque-revival-style building began in 1885 under the direction of Géry Legrand, mayor of Lille, and it was completed in 1892. The architects chosen to design the new building were Edouard Bérard (1843–1912) and Fernand Etienne-Charles Delmas (1852–1933) from Paris. During the early 20th century, Victor Mollet served as its official architect. The building is located on the place de la République, in the center of the city, facing the préfecture of Lille. It was renovated during the 1990s and reopened in 1997. At the start of the 1990s, the building's poor state and the moving of Vauban's relief models of fortified towns to Lille forced the town to renovate the building. Work began in 1991, under the architects Jean-Marc Ibos and Myrto Vitart, and was completed in 1997. This allowed the creation of a new 700 m2 basement room for temporary exhibitions, as well as departments for the relief models and for 19th-century sculpture. Overall the museum covers 22000 m2 and held 72430 pieces as of 2015, one of the largest provincial collections of fine art. The collection includes works by Raphael, Donatello, Van Dyck, Tissot, Jordaens, Goya, El Greco, David, Corot, Courbet, Toulouse-Lautrec, Delacroix, Rubens, Rodin, Claudel and Jean Siméon Chardin.
Location Image
229 m

École supérieure de journalisme de Lille

The École supérieure de journalisme de Lille (French pronunciation: [ekɔl sypeʁjœʁ də ʒuʁnalism də lil], Superior School of Journalism of Lille, abbr. ESJ Lille) is a private non-profit institution of higher education, a French Grande École in Lille dedicated to journalism and related studies. The ESJ is a graduate school of the University of Lille as part of a public-private partnership. It has been elected best French journalism school in 2013 by Le Figaro. It is one of the top 3 journalism schools in France, alongside the CFJ at the Paris-Panthéon-Assas University and the Sciences Po Journalism School.
Location Image
259 m

Christ Church, Lille

Christ Church Lille is an English-speaking Anglican Church located in the city of Lille in Nord-Pas-de-Calais, the Flemish area of France. Christ Church Lille is part of the Church of England, Diocese in Europe.
Location Image
320 m

Lille Synagogue

Lille Synagogue (French: Synagogue de Lille) is a Jewish congregation and synagogue, located at 5, rue Auguste Angellie, in Lille, in the Hauts-de-France region of France. The congregation worships in the Ashkenazi rite.
Location Image
409 m

Siege of Lille (1667)

The siege of Lille took place during the War of Devolution. Louis XIV's forces besieged Lille from 10 August to 28 August 1667. It was the only major engagement of the war. Lille was the first major victory for Vauban’s siege techniques. Louis XIV, arguing that the Spanish dowry of his wife Maria Theresa of Spain had not been paid, began to expand French borders to the north and east, invading the Spanish Netherlands. This began a conflict with Spain that became the War of Devolution. After taking Charleroi, Tournai and Douai, French troops laid siege to Lille, at that time part of the county of Flanders under Spanish rule. Siege techniques applied by the French military engineer Vauban were instrumental in their capture.