Useful information
Address
PLATEFORME 10 - Place de la Gare 16
1003 Lausanne
Schedules
Free
Access
CFF train station: 3 minutes on foot
Bus 1, 3, 21, 60: «Lausanne-Gare» stop
Bus 6: «Cécil» stop
Metro M2: «Lausanne-Gare» stop
More info
The Catalogue raisonné des peintures et des pastels français du Musée cantonal des Beaux-Arts de Lausanne 1800-1945 is the culmination of several years of research into the museum’s collection. To mark the publication of this catalogue raisonné, MCBA is pleased to feature in its galleries some sixty works of art. It is a rare occasion indeed, bringing together major pieces - often on loan to international institutions - along with more obscure pieces, including some that are being shown for the first time.
“French Painting 1800-1945. Anatomy of a Collection” highlights the different facets of a unique collection, one that naturally reflects the history and policy of the museum’s approach to acquisition, as well as the tastes of the collectors who made this enrichment possible. From the first gifts to the institution at the start of the 1840s to recent acquisitions, made in light of the pieces that had entered the collection over the years, the show traces the constant attraction of French art in a museum that is especially known for having asserted its regional and national identity.
The windfall of over one hundred paintings and pastels the Lausanne doctor Henri-Auguste Widmer bequeathed to the museum in the 1930s - not to mention many Italian, Belgian and Swedish - permanently changed the profile of the MCBA collection. It was now open, to a significant degree, to the artistic output of one of Switzerland’s large neighbours and, more broadly, to the greater world beyond. The urge to keep a trace of artists who stayed in the Canton of Vaud, like Courbet or Corot, has also helped to develop the French presence of a Lausanne-based collection.
Although not intended to offer a complete history of French painting from Romanticism to the Return to Order, the European art movement after the First World War, along with Realism and Impressionism in between, the show points up the French touch at work in the MCBA collection.