Art versus the State : the architectural debate regarding the Luxembourg Museum and the building of the illegitimacy of the French art policy, 1848-1920 ; L’Art contre l’État ? : la trajectoire architecturale du Musée du Luxembourg dans la construction de l’illégitimité de l’action artistique publique, 1848-1920

This dissertation in architectural history argues that the architectural trajectory of the Luxembourg Museum in Paris was one of the main reasons why the French public art policy was considered as unwarranted and illegitimate. The Luxembourg Museum, whose collections are now scattered in various Parisian and provincial institutions, became in 1818 the world's first museum of contemporary art, by the will of King Louis XVIII. From the beginning, its aim was to feed the Louvre with recent and national art. The symbiotic relationship between these two museums, which was based on the principle of... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Bastoen, Julien
Dokumenttyp: doctoralThesis
Erscheinungsdatum: 2015
Verlag/Hrsg.: HAL CCSD
Schlagwörter: Museum / Architecture / Controversy / Art policy / Cultural policy / Contemporary Art / Muséographie / Muséologie / Histoire de l'architecture / Bâtiments civils et palais nationaux / Conseil des bâtiments civils / Grand Palais / Petit Palais / Projet urbain / Histoire de l'art contemporain / Histoire de l'art XIXe / Léonce Reynaud / Étienne Fournol / Rue Férou / Comité consultatif des musées nationaux / Adolphe Viollet-le-Duc / Julien Simyan / Annexe Caillebotte / Institut national des sourds-muets / Archives du Sénat / Archives des musées nationaux / Archives nationales / Edouard Bigard-Fabre / Jules Comte / Joseph Caillaux / Elisée Déandréis / Georges Berger / Charles Blanc / Claude Monet 1840-1926 / Octave Mirbeau / Gustave Caillebotte / Gustave Geffroy / Claude Monet / Georges Leygues / Exposition universelle de 1855 / Exposition universelle de 1867 / Exposition universelle de 1878 / Henri Eustache / Exposition universelle de 1889 / South Kensington Museum / Loterie / Paul Dubois / Hippolyte Deruaz / Exposition universelle de 1900 / Quartier du Val-de-Grâce
Sprache: Französisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27516466
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-01219438

This dissertation in architectural history argues that the architectural trajectory of the Luxembourg Museum in Paris was one of the main reasons why the French public art policy was considered as unwarranted and illegitimate. The Luxembourg Museum, whose collections are now scattered in various Parisian and provincial institutions, became in 1818 the world's first museum of contemporary art, by the will of King Louis XVIII. From the beginning, its aim was to feed the Louvre with recent and national art. The symbiotic relationship between these two museums, which was based on the principle of communicating vessels, was a paradigm for new museums in Europe and North America, until the first third of the twentieth century. Although the main mission of the Luxembourg Museum was to assert the superiority of French art face to that of other European nations, it was long criticized not only because it did not reflect the diversity of artistic trends, but also because the conditions under which its collections were stored and exhibited were unworthy of Paris' attractiveness and influence. Through the analysis of primary sources, press reviews and parliamentary papers, we wanted to test the hypothesis that the mobilization of different categories of stakeholders within and outside the artistic field led to an increasing distrust of public art policy. Leading artists represented in the museum, influential journalists from daily and art newspapers, art and patrons societies, citizens and merchant associations, promoted mobilization against through speeches, petitions, surveys or media campaigns. Even the museum professionals themselves were powerless against complicated bureaucratic procedures, shoestring budgets for national museums, and unsuitable storage and exhibition spaces, and ended up questioning the role of the French state in art policy. The negative image of the role of the French state was shaped at key moments and recurring events: the re-hanging of the collection, the display of a new gift or bequest, ...