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ATTRACTION
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Musée National de Céramique de Sèvres
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Next door to the Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres, this museum boasts one of the world's finest collections of faience and porcelain, some of which belonged to Mme du Barry, Mme de Pompadour's successor as Louis XV's mistress (Mme de Pompadour loved Sèvres porcelain). On view is the Pompadour rose (which the English called the rose du Barry), a style much in vogue in the 1750s and 1760s. The painter Boucher made some of the designs used by the factory, as did the sculptor Pajou (he created the bas-reliefs for the Opéra at Versailles). The factory pioneered what became known as the Louis Seize (Louis XVI) style -- it's all here, plus lots more, including works from Sèvres's arch rival, Meissen.
Open: Wed-Mon 10am-5pm.Admission 3.75€ adults, 2.50€ ages 18-25, free for children 17 and under.Métro: Pont de Sèvres, then walk across the Seine to the Left Bank.
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