French museums are full in 2023

by time news

2024-01-06 18:40:13

8.9 million visitors to the Louvre, 3.9 million to the Musée d’Orsay, 635,000 to the Palais de la Porte Dorée… Parisian institutions are setting records.

Exceptional exhibitions and a tenfold appetite after a long period of health restrictions: four years after Covid, the major Parisian museums were full of visitors in 2023, breaking attendance records or returning to their 2019 levels.

Orsay is a hit thanks to exhibitions

With nearly 3.9 million visitors in 2023, the Musée d’Orsay beats a “historic record” and totals, with its counterpart, the Musée de l’Orangerie (1.2 million visitors), 5.1 million visitors. The exhibitions Manet-Degas, Pastels, from Millet to Redon or Van Gogh in Auvers-sur-Oise, the last months were acclaimed by visitors, including “the French are back en masse”, says general administrator Pierre-Emmanuel Lecerf. Five weeks before its closure, the Van Gogh exhibition is also already in full swing “a historic record with 568,000 visitors, or 7,200 every day”, he emphasizes. If the Louvre ultimately wishes to open a second entrance to facilitate access to its collections, Orsay and the Orangerie will begin renovation work on their reception areas from 2025, without closing the museums.

The Louvre, almost as good as in 2019

Although having maintained a gauge of 30,000 visitors per day, the Louvre Museum displays a total of 8.9 million visitors (+14% compared to 2022), close to its 2019 level (9.6 million visitors ). The largest museum in the world, which will maintain its daily capacity during the Paris Olympics (from July 26 to August 11), intends “count less on attendance records” – it had a total of 10.2 million visitors in 2018 – that on “improving the reception of the public and the quality of visits” of its collections, including The Mona Lisa by Leonardo da Vinci. Two out of three visitors are foreign tourists, compared to 32% of French people. As in 2022, 60% of them discovered the Louvre for the first time, 43% of whom were under 26 years old and 40% of whom also benefited from free access to the museum. Main new feature in 2024: the sharp increase in ticket prices which go from 17 to 22 euros from January 15. That’s an increase of 30%!

The Asian public absent from Versailles

If the Americans are back as in 2022 (with almost one in five visitors), the Asian public is still missing. Together, Japanese, Korean and Chinese visitors were absent this year at Versailles, while Chinese visitors alone represented 13% of the palace’s attendance in 2019. Evacuated and closed several times in recent months, following of unfounded bomb threats, the castle claims not to have suffered from them. Its visitors were able to postpone their visit for a few hours or until the next day.

Free access boosts the museums of the City of Paris

With its 14 sites spread across the capital (Maison de Balzac, Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris, Petit Palais, Maison de Victor Hugo, etc.), Paris Musée recorded attendance up 17%, with 5.3 million visitors. visitors (4.54 million in 2022). The City is delighted to see 3 million people have been welcomed into museum collections with free access (+30% compared to 2022). Temporary exhibitions and heritage sites attracted 2.2 million visitors (+6% compared to 2022). The exhibition that attracted the most people was by far that of Catacombs of Paris. Open from January 1 to December 31, it welcomed more than 600,000 visitors. This year the City recorded a “attendance record”helped by three cultural places in particular.

The Museum of Modern Art in Paris recorded 927,023 visitors throughout the year. The exhibition Nicolas de Staël, which offered a major retrospective of the painter, has welcomed 330,000 visitors since September 15, 2023. The Carnavalet-Histoire Museum in Paris records 1.05 million visitors. The most successful exhibition was that of Philippe Starck, Paris is pataphysicalwith 50,000 visitors from March 29 to August 27, 2023.
The Petit Palais, Paris Museum of Fine Arts, holds the record this year with 1.18 million visitors. His exhibition of Sarah Brandt, And the woman created the starrecorded 154,500 visitors from April 14 to August 27, 2023.

The Pompidou Center caught in the strike

Due to close from 2025 for major asbestos removal and renovation work, planned until 2030, the Center Pompidou welcomed more than 2.6 million people in 2023. This attendance is “close to 2019 level”despite a “slowdown at the end of the year”, he announced in a press release. In recent weeks, it has experienced several days of closure linked to a strike to protest against the conditions of this closure. The major retrospectives of Germaine Richier and Norman Foster still marked the year with 177,662 and 214,309 visitors respectively.

National Monuments Center, historic!

The Center for National Monuments (CMN), which manages around a hundred cultural sites including the Mont-Saint-Michel Abbey and the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, also reported a “historic record” with 11 million visitors (+15% compared to 2022), including that of the Pantheon which exceeds one million attendances for the first time.

The Navy museums at the party

The national maritime museum, which is made up of five sites (Brest, Port-Louis, Rochefort, Toulon and Paris) has 273,312 visitors to the port museums (258,550 in 2022). After seven years of closure for restoration work, the Palais de Chaillot, Place du Trocadéro, reopened its doors on November 17, 2023. 74,500 visitors have been there since.

Napoleon makes the success of the Army Museum

The Army Museum records an increase of 13% compared to 2022 thanks to 1.2 million visitors. The Hôtel National des Invalides has hosted numerous successful exhibitions. 74,428 people visited the exhibition The Hate of the Clans. Wars of Religion, 1559-1610 presented from April 5 to July 30, an attendance success which places it just behind Napoleon strategist (100,698 visitors), Special forces (96,247 visitors), Secret Wars (95,769 visitors), Napoleon on Saint Helena (90,265 visitors) and Picasso and the war (86,885 visitors).

The BNF beats its historic record of 2019

The National Library of France beats its historic record for 2019 with 1.45 million visitors to its reading rooms, museum, exhibitions and events on its four Parisian sites: Richelieu (2nd arrondissement), Arsenal (4th arrondissement), Opéra (9th arrondissement), François-Mitterrand (13th arrondissement) and in its branch of the Performing Arts department in Avignon. In 2023, 70,000 BnF Annual Pass memberships have been registered.

More than 40% of visitors to Quai Branly

With 1.4 million visits (+40% compared to 2022), the Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac museum also announces “exceptional attendance” in 2023, higher than the years before the Covid health crisis.

New record at the Palais de la Porte Dorée

With 635,363 visitors welcomed in 2023 (+21% compared to the previous record of 2019), the Palace of the Golden Gate beats this previous record. The place houses the National Museum of the History of Immigration which reopened its doors last June and which welcomed 141,529 visitors in six months.

“A benchmark year” in Fontainebleau

In 2023, the Fontainebleau estate welcomed more than 1,780,000 visitors (+15% compared to 2022), with more than 560,000 visits to the castle (+29% compared to 2022). It is “a reference year” since the place even beat the figures for 2019 (+5%). Among the various highlights of the year, the visit which had the greatest success was the contemporary art trail, Full-scale. 18 artists in the garden, with 61,000 visitors.


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