Musée des Arts Forains | |
Native Name: | Musée des Arts Forains |
Native Name Lang: | fr |
Coordinates: | 48.8331°N 2.3889°W |
Established: | 1996 |
Location: | Paris, France |
Collection: | Amusement rides |
Website: | http://arts-forains.com/en |
The Musée des Arts Forains (Fairground Museum) is a private museum of funfair and fairground objects located within the Pavillons de Bercy in the 12th arrondissement of Paris at 53, avenue des Terroirs de France, Paris, France. It is open to the public by prior reservation.
The museum occupies a structure that was once part of the wine warehouses of Bercy, a commercial district that was once the largest wine market in the world.[1] The museum was created by Jean Paul Favand, an actor and antiques dealer, from his private collection.[2] It opened to the public in 1996, and now contains a variety of objects dating between 1850 and 1950 including 14 amusement rides, 16 fair stalls and restored attractions, 18 sets of historical works, and 1522 independent works. The collections include merry-go-rounds and carousels, German swings, hundred-year-old bicycles, Japanese billiards, a Parisian Waiter Race and a Hooghuys Organ, and the grand vizier Ali Pasha.
In 2009, the Musée des arts forains was listed as a Living Heritage Company.[3]
The museum is a place of 11,400 m2. The permant collection is composed of three thematic rooms (covering about 2000 square meters each): "The Venetian Lounges" (Les Salons Vénitiens), "The Theatre of Marvels" (Le Théâtre du Merveilleux) and "The Fairground Art Museum" (Le Musée des Arts Forains). Mainly used for corporate events, the museum is also open to individual visitors (by reservation only).[4] [5]