Les Arts Décoratifs

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Inside the museum

Les Arts Décoratifs is a private, non-profit museum of decorative arts located in Paris, France.

The museum dates to 1882, when collectors with an interest in the applied arts formed the initial organization. For many years it was known as the Union centrale des Arts décoratifs (UCAD), but in December 2004 it was renamed Les Arts Decoratifs. Pamela Golbin is the chief curator of fashion and textiles at Les Arts Décoratifs.[1]

Sites and collection[]

The museum currently occupies three sites, with the Ateliers du Carrousel (art and craft workshops) active at all three:

As of 2006, its collections included approximate 357,100 works as follows:

  • Arts Décoratifs — 150,000 works from medieval furniture to contemporary design, including Empire, Art Nouveau and Art Deco styles; large collections of jewelry, toys, wallpaper, gold work, ceramics, glass, drawings and an Islamic and Oriental collection.
  • Publicité — 100,000 historical and contemporary posters as well as over 20,000 French and foreign advertising films from the 1930s to the present day; radio commercials, promotional objects, packaging, and more from the formerly separate Musée de la Publicité.
  • Mode et textile — 86,000 costumes, accessories, and textiles from Copts to the present day; from the formerly separate Musée de la mode et du textile.
  • Musée Nissim de Camondo — 1,100 works; one of the finest sets of French furniture and objets d'art from the second half of the 18th century.
  • In May 2007, Les Arts Décoratifs exhibited Love & Art Children's Foundation's "L'Enfant et l'Art" collection. This art collection was created by children afflicted with cancer at the Hospital Armand Trousseau in sterilized rooms and by children in remission in Les Ateliers du Carrousel under the guidance of Love & Art's founder, artist Alécia de Menezes Seidler.

References[]

  1. ^ Socha, Miles (28 February 2014). "Dries Van Noten's Divine Inspiration". WWD. Retrieved 28 February 2014.

External links[]

Coordinates: 48°51′47″N 2°20′0″E / 48.86306°N 2.33333°E / 48.86306; 2.33333

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