This museum was conceived as a private house, that of a rich collector. The row of salons and spaces arranged in a way as they were appreciated in the eighteenth century, allows to discover a very rich decor combining paintings, drawings, sculptures, tapestries, ceramics, weapons, naturalized animals, furniture, Art objects, installations, photographs, videos .
In the heart of the historic Marais district in Paris, the musée de la Chasse et de la Nature is established within two mansions of the XVII and XVIIIe centuries.
Enlarged and completely redone in 2007, it retains today more than 4000 works of ancient, modern and contemporary art.
The museum is a realization of the François Sommer Foundation.
Created by François Sommer (1904-1973) and his wife Jacqueline (1913-1993), the foundation is recognized as a public utility by decree of November 30, 1966.
It works to build a peaceful dialogue between all users of nature, hunters and non-hunters.
It wishes to disseminate in society the values of a humanistic ecology and to act with sincerity - respecting the dignity of man - for the sustainable use of natural resources.
The museographic route presents the evolution of the relationship between man and wild animal, from antiquity to the present day. Each room is organized around an animal figure (wild boar, deer and wolf, unicorn, birds of prey, dogs, avifauna ...). The Museum of Hunting and Nature therefore does not make the apology of the hunt: it places it in its historical, artistic and cultural context.
ACCESSIBILITY
The museum is accessible to people with reduced mobility
HOW TO REACH
Metro: Hotel de Ville: line 1 / Rambuteau: line 11
Bus: Nearby lines 75 and 29
Vélib ': 67, rue des Archives / 76, rue du Temple
Autolib ': No. 18 (Pearl) / No. 27 (Pastourelle) / No. 36 (Temple)
ADMISSION
PRICES:
Full price: 8 €
Reduced price: 6 €
Free every first Sunday of the month and for children under 18
OPENING HOURS:
next days
Tue 11:00-18:00
Wed 11:00-21:30
Thu 11:00-18:00
Fri 11:00-18:00
Sat 11:00-18:00
Sun 11:00-18:00
Tue 11:00-18:00
ADDRESS:
62 rue des Archives
75003 Paris
Île-de-France
France