Legacy of Mrs L. A. Perrot 1866 (≈ 1866)
Creation of the museum and drawing school.
1869
Opening of the museum
Opening of the museum 1869 (≈ 1869)
Opening at City Hall.
1894
Transfer from museum
Transfer from museum 1894 (≈ 1894)
Installation in the former Benedictine convent.
1958-1968
Reorganization of the museum
Reorganization of the museum 1958-1968 (≈ 1963)
Modernisation of collections and spaces.
Années 1990
Closure for old age
Closure for old age Années 1990 (≈ 1990)
Museum temporarily inaccessible.
29 juillet 2000
Reopening at Hotel-Dieu
Reopening at Hotel-Dieu 29 juillet 2000 (≈ 2000)
Current final installation.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Key figures
Mme L. A. Perrot - Benefactor
The museum's founding legacy in 1866.
Cardinal de Fleury - Founder of the Hospice
Linked to displaced apothecary.
Origin and history
The Greuze Museum originated in a cash bequest made in 1866 by Mrs. L. A. Perrot, allowing the creation of a museum and a drawing school at the City Hall of Tournus. Inaugurated in 1869, he was transferred in 1894 to the former Benedictine convent, where he was enriched with donations and acquisitions until his reorganization between 1958 and 1968. Closed in the 1990s for old age, it was permanently installed in 2000 in a wing of the Hôtel-Dieu, a building built under the reigns of Louis XIV, Louis XV and the Revolution, with some 19th century developments.
The Hôtel-Dieu houses a variety of collections: Burgundian archaeology, works by painter Greuze and local artists, as well as a 17th century apothecary. The latter, from the Maison de Charité de Tournus, is distinguished by its transitional woodwork Louis XV-Louis XVI, its pharmacy pots and its medical books. The pavement, adorned with a central rosette and a five-pointed star, is a rare example preserved in Burgundy. The patient rooms and closed beds of the 17th and 18th centuries complete this exceptional hospital heritage.
The Greuze Museum is labeled Musée de France and is located at 21 rue de l'Hôpital in Tournus, Saône-et-Loire. His interest lies as much in his architecture as in his collections, reflecting the medical, artistic and social history of the region. The site, accessible via museum-greuze.fr, offers a unique testimony of the hospital and artistic practices of past centuries.