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Skip Paris’ Musée d’Orsay and visit the Musée Moreau

Visitors admire and take photos of “Blue Water Lilies” by Impressionist Claude Monet in the Musee d’Orsay, Paris, France

Travel writer and cultural correspondent Lindsay Tramuta knows all about the hidden gems of Paris, where she’s been based since 2006. Here, she argues that time-pressed travelers should plan a visit to a favorite of in-the-know art lovers. 

Paris offers the chance to engage with culture past and present like no other city on earth.

By some estimates, the French capital has more than 120 museums of various sizes within its city limits. This means there’s always a new exhibit or unexplored collection to check out, whether you’re a first-time visitor or lifelong resident. But such abundance can feel overwhelming, especially for those visitors short on time.

The city’s marquee artistic temples, from the Louvre to the Centre Pompidou (called simply “Beaubourg” by Parisians), are bucket-list destinations for a reason: they house some of the world’s most exceptional, epoch-defining works of art. Yet off the beaten track, stupendous collections and thought-provoking exhibitions await throughout the city. If, that is, you know where to look.

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What to skip

After the Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay was the most eye-opening artistic experience on my first trip to Paris as a teen. One of the Europe’s largest museums, the Orsay occupies a former railway station on the Rive Gauche (Left Bank), an opulent structure built for the Exposition Universelle of 1900 and which later served as a mailing center and film set. In 1986, the striking Beaux-Arts building took on its best-known role: as the home to the world’s most expansive collection of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist paintings, sculptures and decorative objects. Works by the most famous artists from this period – from Monet and Degas to Cézanne and Van Gogh – hang in the museum’s many, many galleries.

The Musée d’Orsay brims with Impressionist masterpieces (like Monet’s “Blue Water Lilies”) – but also with crowds © Elena Dijour / Shutterstock

While smaller in scale than the monumental Louvre just across the river, the Orsay is no less dense, with some 3000 works on display at any given time. For many, that’s an overwhelming number of pieces – and the crowds jostling for a good shot of Manet’s Olympia can also fray any visitor’s nerves. You should absolutely experience the Musée d’Orsay at least once. Yet if its size and visitor…

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