The Centre Pompidou
Museum
About The Centre Pompidou
The Centre Pompidou houses Europe's most comprehensive modern art collection in a deliberately industrial building where escalators snake up the outside and colored pipes expose the guts of the structure. The permanent collection on floors 4 and 5 traces art from 1905 to today-you'll find Picasso's Blue Period works, Kandinsky's geometric abstractions, and entire rooms dedicated to Matisse's paper cutouts. The sixth floor terrace provides unobstructed views over the Marais rooftops to Sacré-Cœur.
The experience starts with the external escalator ride, which builds anticipation as Paris unfolds below. Inside, the galleries are spacious and well-lit, though the layout can feel maze-like on busy days. The contemporary sections (floor 4) showcase video installations and conceptual pieces that younger visitors gravitate toward, while floor 5's early modern works draw the art history crowd. The building itself competes for attention-those colorful pipes aren't just decorative, they're functional.
Skip the temporary exhibitions unless you're genuinely interested-they're overpriced and often underwhelming compared to the permanent collection. Start on floor 5 with the historical pieces, then work your way down. The museum shop is excellent but expensive. Avoid weekends entirely if possible; the narrow galleries become uncomfortably crowded, and you'll spend more time navigating people than looking at art.
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