Musée Sainte-Croix
The Musée Sainte-Croix is the largest museum in Poitiers, France.
Planned by the architect poitevin Jean Monge and built in 1974, it stands at the site of the former Abbaye Sainte-Croix, which was moved to Saint-Benoît, Vienne. It is a constructed of concrete and glass, in the 1970s style.
The museum hosts a permanent exhibition on periods from prehistory to the contemporary art, through the medieval period and the Fine arts. Major works include sculptures of Camille Claudel and Auguste Rodin, a reliquary vase from Saint-Savin-sur-Gartempe, paintings by Piet Mondrian and Odilon Redon and the stone sculpture of L'Âme de la France by Charles Marie Louis Joseph Sarrabezolles.
- Le Repos de la Sainte Famille pendant la fuite en Égypte, Louis Gauffier, 1792.
- La Mort de Hyacinthe, Jean Broc, 1801.
- Eugène Fromentin, Une Fantasia (Maghreb), Algérie, 1869
- Ophélie, Léopold Burthe, (detail) 1851.
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Coordinates: 46°34′45″N 0°20′52″E / 46.5792°N 0.3477°E
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