Delacroix. A Place, an Artist
Eugène Delacroix
Musée national Eugène-Delacroix
6 rue de Furstemberg, Paris, France 75006
Mon, Wed-Fri 12pm-5:30pm, Sat-Sun 10am-5:30pm. Closed Tuesdays, Jan 1, May 1, Dec 25.
Admission
€9
grants general museum admission (free for eligible visitors)
About
Rare archival documents, sketches, and contemporary posters and photographs offer a glimpse of a more personal Delacroix, far from his large-scale decorative works and intimately linked to his creative process. This exhibition traces the history of the creation of the Musée Delacroix and the saving of the painter’s studio from likely destruction by his admirers. What do his friendships and professional relationships tell us about Delacroix? From 18 April 2026, a new display will be dedicated to the French writer George Sand (1804–1876) to mark the 150 th anniversary of her death. Portraits of Delacroix’s close friend will be highlighted, along with two of the painter’s famous works: Portrait of George Sand , depicting her in men’s attire, and The Education of the Virgin , painted in Nohant and once owned by her. The tour invites visitors to (re)discover the museum’s collection in the artist’s apartment and studio from a fresh perspective through the display of rarely exhibited works. When it opened in 1932, ‘the Delacroix studio’ was conceived by the first president of the Société des Amis, painter Maurice Denis, as ‘an ideal illustration of the Journal’ – a way of penetrating the artist’s thoughts and uncovering the secrets of his studio, much as one does when reading his personal writings. The Delacroix visitors still encounter today in the museum is the Delacroix of sketches and studies he kept in his studio without ever displaying them, the Delacroix shaped by his circle of friends and admirers. Both during his lifetime and after his death, Eugène Delacroix attracted numerous admirers and the ways of paying tribute to him were manifold: creating copies of his most famous pieces, or producing paintings, sculptures and written works that depict him or evoke his art. These admirers included artists as diverse as William Bouguereau, Henri Fantin-Latour, Hippolyte Poterlet, Odilon Redon and Charles Baudelaire. Who were the people close to Delacroix? Family members, friends and acquaintances – men and women alike – introduce themselves and talk about their connection with Eugène Delacroix through the exhibition itinerary. Although the painter sometimes seemed more absorbed in his own thoughts than in the world around him, he visited family and friends, accepted social invitations, and even travelled to England and Morocco. Delacroix worked primarily in his studio. He found inspiration in his own sketches and paintings, in the copies and prints of masters that he kept, and in his memory and imagination.