Musee des Beaux-Arts de Lyon
Museum
About Musee des Beaux-Arts de Lyon
The Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon contains one of France's most impressive art collections outside Paris, spanning 5,000 years from Egyptian sarcophagi to Picasso sketches across 70 rooms in a converted 17th-century Benedictine abbey. You'll find genuine masterpieces that rival the Louvre: Monet water lilies the Parisians don't have, a Rodin sculpture garden in the central courtyard, and an entire floor of Impressionists including rare Degas pastels. The building itself has original abbey architecture and soaring galleries that make each walk between rooms memorable.
Your visit flows naturally from ancient civilizations on the ground floor up through medieval and Renaissance works to the Impressionist rooms that everyone comes for. The sculpture courtyard in the center provides a perfect breather, particularly when lit dramatically in evening hours. You'll spend most of your time on the first floor where the Impressionist collection genuinely surprises: these aren't B-list works shipped out from Paris, but paintings that museums worldwide would fight over. The medieval rooms feel relatively empty compared to the Impressionist rooms upstairs, which is actually a refreshing change.
Most guides don't mention that Wednesday evenings (until 10 PM) transform this place completely: you'll have the Impressionist rooms nearly to yourself for just EUR 8, while weekend afternoons are crowded with tour groups. The Egyptian section is not a priority to visit unless you're genuinely interested, as it's nothing you haven't seen at other museums. The museum cafe serves decent lunches on weekdays, but a real insider tip is visiting the sculpture courtyard during Tuesday market hours when it's free to enter.
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