The Nouveau Musée National de Monaco’s collection gathers more than
10 000 works mainly
created between the 19th and 21st century. This pluralist and diverse collection can be presented from various thematic angles:
performing arts, representations of the human body, or landscape and the relation to nature. An important part of this collection originates from the Villa Sainte Cécile’s Musée des Beaux-arts which displayed – between 1935 and 1958 –
sculptures, ceramics, vues d’optique, paintings, drawings and etchings related to the Principality of Monaco and its surroundings, such as
François-Joseph and Jean-François Bosio’s (Monegasque sculptor and engraver) neo-classical works.
The collection developed at the end of the 1960’s with addition of over
500 dolls and mechanical automatons from the 19th century, bequeathed by Madeleine de Galéa’s grandson to Prince Rainier III and exhibited at Villa Sauber between 1972 and 2008. Simultaneously, the collection was enriched with works linked to Monaco and its region, with artists such as
Claude Monet, Kees Van Dongen and works by Léon Bakst, Natalia Gontcharova, Michel Larionov, Pavel Tchelitchev, Alexandre Benois, Naum Gabo, André Derain, Jean Cocteau, Christian Bérard and
Serge Lifarlinked to the
Ballets Russes de Monte-Carlo. Since 2002, the museum has been conserving
4000 costumes et 400 stage set models from the Opéra de Monte-Carlo and deposited by the Société des Bains de Mer. Monumental works have also joined the museum’s collections, such as those of
Guy Lartigue, Alexander Calder or Victor Vasarely, sculptures by Jean Dubuffet, Anish Kapoor, Claire Fontaine and
Michel Blazy as well as many other works presented in the gardens of the Principality.
Since 2010, with Villa Paloma’s opening, the collection has taken a new direction by orienting its acquisition policy towards modern and contemporary artworks. It includes works by international artists such as
Lucio Fontana, Ettore Spalletti, Brassaï, Christian Boltanski, Bruno Munari, Alberto Magnelli, Valerio Adami, Luigi Ghirri, Andy Warhol, but also
Mark Dion, Nick Mauss, Yinka Shonibare, Camille Henrot, Bertrand Lavier, Jeppe Hein, Francesco Vezzoli, Wolfgang Tillmans, Rebecca Horn, Joan Jonas, Shimabuku, Steve Mc Queen, João Maria Gusmão et Pedro Paiva, Latifa Echakhch, Daniel Steegmann Mangrané, Robert Barry, Thomas Ruff and
Thomas Struth, Yto Barrada, Hans Schabus, Saâdane Afif, Brice Dellsperger and
Jochen Lempert. Open to the major issues of our time, these works also resonate with older collections. responding to the objective of turning the museum into a place dedicated to
Monaco’s artistic heritage. the collection reveals both the Monegasque territory’s particularities and its openness to the world.