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Massey Museum in Tarbes dans les Hautes-Pyrénées

Musée
Musée d'Art et d'histoire locale

Massey Museum in Tarbes

    Rue Achille Jubinal
    65000 Tarbes

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1853
Legacy of Placid Massey
1955
Early Hussard collection
2008
Transfer house Foch
2012
Re-opening after renovation
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Key figures

Placide Massey - Botanist and donor Founded the museum by legacy in 1853.
Jean-Jacques Latour - Architect Designs the eastern building and its tower.
Marcel Boulin - Conservative (1950s) Created the international collection of hussars.
Achille Jubinal - Donor and Member of Parliament Offered major works of fine arts.
Maréchal Foch - Military and historical figure Home turned into a museum in 2008.

Origin and history

The Massey Museum originated in the legacy of Placide Massey (1777-1853), botanist and director of the Trianon nurseries in Versailles. At his death in 1853, he offered Tarbes an exceptional garden and an unfinished museum, designed by architect Jean-Jacques Latour in an oriental style with an observation tower on the Pyrenees. This project aimed to create a museum of natural history for his hometown, marking the birth of the cultural institution.

The museum was completely renovated and reopened in 2012, modernizing its 1,000 m2 of space to meet current conservation standards. It houses two major collections: one dedicated to hussards, with 15,000 objects covering 400 years of history in 30 countries, and another of fine arts, enriched by donations such as that of Achille Jubinal. These collections are presented on two levels, integrating multimedia technologies for a chronological (1545–1945) and thematic path.

In addition to its main site, the museum manages three other places in Tarbes: the home of Marshal Foch, transformed into a museum in 2008 and presenting memories of his military career; the Museum of Deportation and Resistance, created by associations of veterans; and the Carmel exhibition room, dedicated to contemporary art in an old chapel. These extensions reflect his role as conservator of local memory, combining military history, resistance and ethnographic heritage.

The "Bigorre and Four Valleys" collection completes the offer with 6,000 objects illustrating the rural and agro-pastoral life of the Hautes-Pyrénées. Composed around popular traditions, it highlights the technologies and lifestyles of the Pyrenean populations, under the impulse of successive conservatives. This archaeological and ethnographic background reinforces the link between the museum and its territory, from the Pyrenees to the Bigurdane plain.

The building itself, with its observation tower and oriental architecture, bears witness to the influence of Placide Massey, passionate about botany and travel. The adjacent garden, now called Massey Garden, is a green setting for this hybrid museum, mixing art, history and natural sciences. The 2012 renovation made it possible to enhance this unique heritage, while adapting to contemporary expectations of cultural mediation.

External links

Conditions of visit

  • Conditions de visite : Ouvert toute l'année
  • Contact organisation : 05 62 44 36 95