The Musée des Arts et Métiers, Paris

The Museum of Arts and Trades, France

The enchantingly named, Dusty Hawthorne, wrote to point out a simply stunning museum in Paris called the Musée des Arts et Métiers – or The Museum of Arts and Trades.  Their ‘virtual museum visit’ in particular is wonderful (if a little flash-based) and has such fantastic categories as Scientific Instruments, Telecommunications, Power and Energy and Transport – with descriptions and images of items categorized into pre-1750’s, 1750’s to 1850’s, 1850’s to 1950’s and post-1950.  So much there from the Victorian era, and will no doubt please the Steampunk fan of brass and cogs.
There is a beautiful surfeit of things of brass and wood, and apparently the museum itself is reached through a medieval church with beautiful flying machines (such as the Eole bat-plane above) hanging from intricately carved ceilings.  A visual feast; where beauty and science are dramatically entwined, where history smells of varnish, tarnish and soot, and where three-wheeled steam carriages rest proudly next to hand-cranked cinomatographs.

Thankyou Dusty!  It does look a wonderful place to see.  (If you wish to find the virtual museum, in French, click ‘Collections’ and ‘Discover the Museum’).

  • zeebra33
    I spent almost all my sundays with my father at the Museum des Arts et Métiers. It is really a wonderful place which, with Jules Verne's books fascinated me. Do not miss l'Avion d'Ader the supposedly "first plane" powered by steam, which is on the photo (bat like machine). It competes with the Wright Brother's plane for the title of the "first heavier than air" flying machine. Try also to see the "first car", this time not disputed title, by Cugnot, really impressive charriot with primitive steampower engine builded before the french revolution which still shows on the copper steam reservoir the mark of its collision... with a wall. Please pay attention to the Bleriot's plane, the first to cross the Channel, in 1909, a real marsterpiece of minimal engineering with strings and bamboo poles......

    And the rooms devoted to boats, train, first machines to knit socks and mechanical robots from the 17th century as "La joueuse de tympanon"

    Only the Science Museum in London can compete....but with less magic

    Zeebra33
  • Doctor Demetrius Radcliff
    Was this made by DaVinchi?
  • jim ramsay
    i was going to mention the subway station ‘Arts et Métiers’ as a fitting way to approach the museum and i was also going to mention that throughout the museum there are sets of 'railway' tracks embedded in the floor- probably to move some of the weightier exhibits... i wonder what the device that runs along the track looks like...
  • wolfpaw
    I wish I'd known about this back in 1996 when I visited Paris. At the time, Notre Dame was covered in scaffolding (being cleaned, I think) and my time would have been much better spent touring this museum instead. If by chance I get to visit Paris again, I'll make certain that I get to see it.
  • fciron
    ooh, online tour. I tried to go there when I was in Paris ten years ago but they were closed because of a city-wide strike. No I can at least see pictures.
  • Robur
    I remember as a student attending some applied mathematics courses in the 'Ecole des Arts et Métiers'. A magic place.

    You could also visit the subway station 'Arts et Métiers' which has been designed by Schuitten a famous belgian graphist creator.
    He essentially used copper to design it. Greatly inspired by the Nautilus, the roof of the station has huge gears.
    Here a big photo:
    http://www.spirit-of-paris.com/wp-content/photo...
  • steve sparkes
    I recomend "Foucaults Pendulum" by Umberto Ecco the finale of which is set in this museum
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