The Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau describes the museum as housing "a spectacular collection of French decorative art from the second half of the 18th century. Admire Aubusson tapestries, canvases by Élisabeth Vigée-Lebrun or items that once belonged to Marie-Antoinette. Also on display, a collection of Sèvres porcelain and furniture by cabinetmakers Riesener and Oeben".[1]
History
The mansion was built from 1911 to 1914 for Count Moïse de Camondo, a French banker,[2] to display his collection of eighteenth-century French furniture and art objects. It was designed by architect René Sergent and patterned on the Petit Trianon at Versailles, but with modern conveniences. Upon the death of Moïse de Camondo in 1935, it was announced that both the house and its collections were bequeathed to Les Arts Décoratifs in honour of his son, Nissim de Camondo, who had been killed in action during World War I.[3] The house opened as a museum in 1936.
More tragedy followed a few years later when Moïse's daughter and her family were deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp.[4][3] A plaque in the house states that Béatrice de Camondo, her ex-husband Léon Reinach, and their two children (Fanny and Bertrand) all died in the concentration camp. The Camondo family was a Sephardic Jewish clan. Moïse's widow Irène survived the Holocaust by escaping to a villa in the south of France.[5] Nevertheless, there are still living members of the Camondo family nowadays (descendants of Isaac Camondo, the founder of the bank).
Today, the house is maintained as if it were still a private home preserved in its original condition.[3] Three floors are open to visitors – the lower ground floor (kitchens), upper ground floor (formal rooms), first floor (private apartments), and gardens. Outbuildings are also included, which were built in 1863 and enlarged by Count Nissim Camondo; they were later modified by his son, Moïse.[6]
In February 2020, the museum was closed due to the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic.[7] As of May 2022, the museum is open, after having been closed in February 2020 due to the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic.[7]
In the popular media
The house was the location for filming some scenes for Lupin (TV series), standing in for the home of the fictional, wealthy Pellegrini family. Locations included in the television series include the "grounds outside the house, inside the house, and also on the roof".[8][9]
The Nissim de Camondo Museum, by Sylvie Legrand-Rossi, Paris:Les Arts Décoratifs, 2009.
The Camondo Legacy. The passions of a Paris Collector, directed by Marie-Noël de Gary, photographs by Jean-Marie del Moral, London:Thames & Hudson, 2008.
The Nissim de Camondo Museum, by Nadine Gasc, Gérard Mabille, Paris: Musées et Monuments de France: Albin Michel, 1997.
Musée Nissim de Camondo: catalogue des collections, by Jean Messelet, Bertrand Rondot, Xavier Salmon, Béatrice Quette, Paris: Réunion des musées nationaux: Union centrale des arts décoratifs, 1998. ISBN2-7118-3559-6.