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Fournaise House Museum in Chatou dans les Yvelines

Musée
Musée d'Art moderne

Fournaise House Museum in Chatou

    1 Rue du Bac
    78400 Chatou

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1800
1900
2000
1844
Initial construction
1857
Purchase by Alphonse Fournaise
1880-1881
Renoir Paintings
1979
Acquisition by the municipality
1990
Restaurant reopening
2025
Protection of murals
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Alphonse Fournaise - Owner and master of deck Turns the place into a restaurant-guinguette.
Auguste Renoir - Impressionist painter Author of the *Lunch of canoeers* on site.
Guy de Maupassant - Writer Describes the atmosphere in *The Woman of Paul*.
Maurice Réalier-Dumas - Local Artist Decorate the rooms and facade.
Benoît Noël - First curator of the museum Named in 1992 to manage collections.

Origin and history

The Fournaise house, built in 1844 in Chatou on the island of Impressionists, was originally a gargot and a shipyard. In 1857, Alphonse Fournaise, master of the bridge, acquired it to open a restaurant and a boat rental, transforming Chatou into a popular canoeing station. The successive enlargements and the addition of a cast iron balustrade make it a fashionable place, frequented by all-Paris. Under his direction, the establishment becomes a "shoal boater's phanaster", where it spanks for a few sous, appealing artists and bourgeois in search of fluvial leisure.

At the turn of the 1880s, the Fournaise House welcomed Impressionists, including Auguste Renoir, who painted Le Déjeuner des Canoeiers (1880) and Les Deux Sœurs (1881). Guy de Maupassant, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet and Gustave Caillebotte also co-host local artists such as Maurice Réalier-Dumas, who participates in the decoration of the places. The establishment, described by Maupassant in La Femme de Paul as the "Restaurant Grillon", embodies the artistic and worldly effervescence of the banks of the Seine. Its closure at the beginning of the 20th century marked the decline of the site, saved in extremis by the commune of Chatou in 1979.

The Fournaise House was listed as an inventory of historical monuments in 1982 and is restored with public and community funding (including the Friends of the Fournaise House and Friends of French Art). In 1990 it reopened as a restaurant, while the museum, inaugurated in 1992, exhibited works by André Derain, Albert Lebourg, or Adrien Karbowsky, as well as ceramics and souvenirs from the golden age of canoeing. The main hall, with its murals, has been protected as historical monuments since 2025. The museum also maintains a Renoir sculpture and digitized archives on the Mona Lisa base.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Contact organisation : 01 34 80 63 22