Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Georges Garret Museum in Vesoul en Haute-Saône

Musée
Musée de Peinture
Label Musée de France
Musée d'Archéologie et d'Antiquité

Georges Garret Museum in Vesoul

    1 Rue des Ursulines
    70000 Vesoul

Timeline

XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1882
Museum Foundation
1938
Transfer to City Hall
1964
Opening section archaeology
1981
Installation of Ursulines convent
2024
Change of name
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Jean-Léon Gérôme - Painter and academic sculptor Major donor, born in Vesoul.
Victor Jeanneney - Founder of the museum Professor of drawing, first director.
Georges Garret - Patron and mayor of Vesoul Worked for the museum (1938-1947).
Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret - Naturalist painter Gérôme's student, representative of Haute-Saônoise school.
Jules-Alexis Muenier - Naturalist and conservative painter Donor, farmer scene specialist.

Origin and history

The Musée Jean-Léon Gérôme, originally named Musée Georges-Garret until 2024, was founded in 1882 in Vesoul, Haute-Saône. Created by Victor Jeanneney, professor of drawing and painter, he was first installed in a chapel of the convent of the Annonciades. The first works come from local donations, including those of Jean-Léon Gérôme himself, a native of Vesoul and a major figure in French academic painting. The museum develops thanks to the contributions of bourgeois and Vesulian artists, with an initial vocation centered on fine arts.

In 1938, the museum was transferred to the city hall to host its growing collections, enriched by local archaeological discoveries. An archaeology section was officially opened in 1964, following the deposit of Gallo-Roman funeral steles by the Société d'agriculture, lettres, sciences et arts de Haute-Saône. In 1981, the museum moved to the former Ursulines convent, renovated for the occasion, offering a space adapted to its two collections: archaeology (Prehistory in the Middle Ages) and fine arts, dominated by Gérôme and the Haute-Saônoise school.

The museum now houses Jean-Léon Gérôme's most important collection in the world, with about 60 works (paintings and sculptures), as well as creations by his disciples such as Dagnan-Bouveret, Muenier or Courtois. Its archaeological halls exhibit local remains, including funeral steles of Corre and objects of the Gallo-Roman villa of Chassey-lès-Montbozon. Labelled "Musée de France", it plays a major cultural role in Burgundy-Franche-Comté, with a free admission since 2001 and educational activities for the school.

The fine arts collections cover various themes: Orientalism, mythology, history and naturalism, reflecting the academic heritage of Gérôme. The works of the Haute-Saônoise school, marked by peasant realism and portraits, complete this panorama. The museum also organizes temporary exhibitions and values the local heritage, as evidenced by its medieval tombstones or its objects from Vesoul Castle.

Renamed in 2024 to celebrate the two-hundredth anniversary of Gérôme, the museum perpetuates its link with the city, where the artist and his students marked history. Its building, which was listed as a historical monument in 1992, embodies both religious architecture (the Ursulines) and the artistic memory of the Haute-Saône. Family donations, such as that of the Gérôme heirs in 1945, made it possible to establish a single fund, now accessible to all.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Ouverture permanente : tous les jours : de 14h à 18h Fermeture hebdomadaire le mardi.
  • Tarif individuel : Entrée gratuite
  • Contact organisation : 03 84 76 51 54