Construction of the workshop house 1927 (≈ 1927)
Designed by Sophie Taeuber in Clamart.
1929
Installation of artists
Installation of artists 1929 (≈ 1929)
Jean Arp and Sophie Taeuber established themselves there.
1966
Death of Jean Arp
Death of Jean Arp 1966 (≈ 1966)
Prefigures the creation of the foundation.
1979
Recognition of public utility
Recognition of public utility 1979 (≈ 1979)
Foundation created by Marguerite Hagenbach.
2003
Rehabilitation of workshops
Rehabilitation of workshops 2003 (≈ 2003)
For confiscated plaster sculptures.
2004
Label Musée de France
Label Musée de France 2004 (≈ 2004)
Officially assigned to the foundation.
2006
Deposit of confiscated works
Deposit of confiscated works 2006 (≈ 2006)
114 sculptures by the Pompidou Centre.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Jean Arp - Pioneer artist of Dadaism
Created the foundation with Sophie Taeuber.
Sophie Taeuber - Artist and architect of the house
Designed the workshop in 1927.
Marguerite Hagenbach - Founder and second wife
The project was carried out in 1979.
Origin and history
The Arp foundation, created by Marguerite Hagenbach (second wife of Jean Arp), was recognized as a public utility in 1979. It preserves the studio house built in 1927 by Sophie Taeuber in Clamart, where the two artists, major figures of Dadaism and Abstraction, lived and worked from 1929. This place became a space of creation and encounters for the artistic avant-gardes of the twentieth century, sheltering their works today in their original setting.
The museum, labeled "Musée de France" in 2004, also serves as a research centre for art historians and professionals. It maintains an exceptional collection, including 114 sculptures and 32 plaster reliefs by Jean Arp, confiscated in 1996 and deposited in 2006 by the Centre Pompidou. The foundation thus perpetuates the heritage of the two artists, offering an immersion in their creative universe.
Marguerite Hagenbach carried out this project according to the wishes of Jean Arp, expressed before his death in 1966, to spread their joint work. The house, designed by Sophie Taeuber, reflects their artistic ideas and today welcomes researchers, collectors and visitors. His interest lies in preserving a place of life and creation, where works interact with their intimate history.
In 2003, the plaster workshops were redesigned to display confiscated pieces, further enriching this heritage. The foundation embodies a consensus around the importance of sustaining this testimony of the avant-gardes, mixing emotion, pedagogy and artistic memory.
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