01. GIVERNY : MAISON ET JARDINS DE CLAUDE MONET
A Living Palette in the Heart of Normandy
Stepping through the gates of the Giverny estate is like entering a Claude Monet painting. The master of Impressionism lived there for 43 years, shaping his home and gardens into a work of art in their own right. The house, with its pink facade and green shutters, has retained all its period charm: visitors can explore the studio-living room, the famous bright yellow dining room, and the blue Rouen-tiled kitchen. Each room reflects the painter's daily life and his passion for Japanese prints, creating a warm and intensely colorful atmosphere.
The exterior is divided into two distinct parts: the Clos Normand, a symmetrical flower garden with metal arches laden with roses, and the Water Garden, located across the road. It was here, around the water lily pond and the famous Japanese bridge, that Monet found the inspiration for his most celebrated series. Among the wisteria, weeping willows and water lilies, the garden offers a spectacle that changes with the seasons and the light, making each visit a unique sensory experience where nature and painting become one.
02. CHATEAU DU CLOS LUCE PARC LEONARDO DA VINCI
03. MUSEE RODIN
Housed in the sumptuous Hôtel Biron, an 18th-century mansion near Les Invalides, the Rodin Museum is one of the most enchanting places in Paris. It was here that the sculptor Auguste Rodin lived and worked at the end of his life, bequeathing his entire oeuvre to the French state. The interior winds through salons with polished parquet floors and gilded woodwork, where white marble and powerful bronzes seem to come alive in the natural light streaming through the tall windows.
The highlight, however, remains its three-hectare sculpture garden, a veritable oasis of greenery in the heart of the capital. Strolling among the rose bushes and hornbeam hedges, visitors discover the artist's monumental masterpieces: The Thinker, The Burghers of Calais, and the breathtaking Gates of Hell. It is this unique alliance between the finesse of classical architecture, the raw power of sculpture and the serenity of the park that makes this museum an enchanting interlude, far from the tumult of Paris.
04. MUSEE CAMILLE CLAUDEL
Inaugurado en 2017 en la ciudad donde Camille Claudel pasó su adolescencia y dio sus primeros pasos como artista, el Museo Camille Claudel se ha convertido en un santuario esencial para su obra. Este museo, con su sobria arquitectura contemporánea que se integra armoniosamente en el centro histórico, alberga la colección pública más grande del mundo de la obra de la artista. A través de una luminosa exposición, los visitantes descubren la meteórica evolución de su talento, desde sus primeros estudios con Alfred Boucher hasta sus obras maestras de madurez, como *La Edad Madura*, *El Vals* y *La Suplicante*. El museo no se limita a aislar a Claudel, sino que la sitúa en el corazón de su época, en medio de una increíble colección de esculturas del siglo XIX, que ilustra la transición del clasicismo a la modernidad.
Recorrer las galerías es presenciar la íntima interacción de la artista con sus materiales (terracota, yeso, bronce, mármol). El museo destaca la gran sensibilidad y maestría técnica de Camille, que rivalizaban con las de su mentor y amante Auguste Rodin, a la vez que afirmaba su propio lenguaje artístico, caracterizado por el movimiento, la emoción cruda y la trágica introspección. El espacio museístico, que alberga la antigua residencia familiar de la familia Claudel, ofrece una atmósfera íntima y conmovedora, haciendo finalmente justicia a la artista que durante mucho tiempo permaneció a la sombra de los grandes de su época.



