Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Institute of Art and Archaeology in Paris à Paris 1er dans Paris 6ème

Patrimoine classé
Académie
Vestiges archéologiques

Institute of Art and Archaeology in Paris

    3 Rue Michelet
    75006 Paris 6e Arrondissement
State ownership
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Institut dart et darchéologie à Paris
Crédit photo : Marc Baronnet - Sous licence Creative Commons

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1917
Gift from Doucet Library
1920
Launch of the architectural competition
1925-1928
Construction of the institute
mai 1968
Destruction of the Rome Plan
1993
Transfer from Doucet Library
9 septembre 1996
Historical monument classification
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Building housing the Institute, with the exception of classified parts (Box 06: 02 AQ 11): registration by decree of 9 September 1994 - Façades and roofs of the building housing the Institute; vestibule with its staircase; library, including the landing space separating it from the stairway (Box 06: 02 AQ 11): classification by order of 10 September 1996

Key figures

Paul Bigot - Architect Manufacturer of the building (1925-1928).
Jacques Doucet - Patron and collector Donor of the Art Library (1917).
Marquise Arconati-Visconti - Patron Project financier (3 million gold francs).
Émile Mâle - Art historian Co-conceptor of the Art Laboratory program.
Raymond Subes - Iron and steel Author of the building grid.

Origin and history

The Institute of Art and Archaeology, also known as Centre Michelet, is an emblematic building in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, located at 8 avenue de l'Observatoire and 3 rue Michelet. Built between 1925 and 1928 by architect Paul Bigot, it illustrates a mixture of historical influences (Sienese, Florentine, African) and a modern reinforced concrete frame with red bricks. The project was made possible thanks to the gift of the Marquise Arconati-Visconti (3 million francs-gold) and conceived as a "laboratory d'art" around the library of Jacques Doucet, offered in 1917.

The building was organized around its central reading room, framed by corridors and classrooms. It was originally home to the famous model of Paul Bigot's Rome Plan, an educational tool destroyed in May 1968, as well as the Doucet library, transferred in 1993 to the INHA (Richelieu site). Since 1971, the institute has been shared between the UFR d'histoire de l'art of the universities Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Sorbonne Université, with a joint library opened in 1996.

Ranked a historic monument in 1996 for its facades, roofs, vestibule and library, the building is distinguished by its terracotta archeological frieze (realized by the Manufacture de Sèvres) and its ironwork grill signed Raymond Subes. Its eclectic architecture and educational vocation make it a unique testimony of the Entre-deux-guerres, combining artistic heritage and technical innovation.

Today, the Institute of Art and Archaeology hosts university departments, research centres (such as the CeRAP or CREOPS), and doctoral schools. Although the Doucet Library has left the site, the site remains a major hub for teaching and research in art history, while maintaining remarkable heritage elements, such as interior decorations and the original structure.

External links