Fodor's Expert Review Musée Zadkine

Montparnasse Fodor's Choice
Free

The sculptor Ossip Zadkine spent nearly four decades living in this bucolic retreat near the Jardin du Luxembourg, creating graceful, elongated figures known for their clean lines and simplified features. Zadkine, a Russian-Jewish émigré, moved to Paris in 1910 and fell into a circle of avant-garde artists. His early works, influenced by African, Greek, and Roman art, later took a Cubist turn, no doubt under the influence of his friend, the founder of the Cubist movement, Pablo Picasso. This tiny museum displays a substantial portion of the 400 sculptures and 300 drawings bequeathed to the city by his wife, artist Valentine Prax. There are busts in bronze and stone reflecting the range of Zadkine's style, and an airy back room filled with lithe female nudes in polished wood. The charming, leafy garden contains a dozen statues nestled in the trees, including The Destroyed City, a memorial to the Dutch city of Rotterdam, destroyed by the Germans in 1940.

Fodor's Choice Art Museum Free

Quick Facts

100 bis, rue d'Assas
Paris, Île-de-France  75006, France

01–55–42–77–20

www.zadkine.paris.fr

Sight Details:
Rate Includes: Free; €9 for temporary exhibitions, Closed Mon.

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