Musée de l'Orangerie
The Orangerie houses Monet's eight massive Water Lilies panels in two purpose-built oval rooms that wrap around you like cocoons.
About Musée de l'Orangerie
The Orangerie houses Monet's eight massive Water Lilies panels in two purpose-built oval rooms that wrap around you like cocoons. These aren't paintings you look at - they're environments you enter. The curved walls and natural lighting create an almost meditative space where the brushstrokes seem to shimmer and move. Downstairs, the Walter-Guillaume collection packs serious punches with Cézanne's card players, Renoir's nudes, and some of Soutine's most visceral portraits.
Your visit starts upstairs in those famous oval rooms, where most people spend 20-30 minutes slowly circling the murals. The lighting changes subtly throughout the day, making morning visits feel cooler and bluer. Downstairs feels like a completely different museum - intimate galleries with about 140 works that you can see comfortably in 45 minutes. The Picasso room tends to get crowded around lunchtime.
Honestly, this place works best when you're not rushed. The Water Lilies lose their magic if you're checking your phone or hurrying through. Skip the audio guide - it breaks the spell. The basement collection is genuinely excellent but gets overshadowed by the Monet upstairs. If you only have 30 minutes, spend it all with the Water Lilies.
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