The museum, in a beautiful mansion once the home of Mirabeau’s sister, the Marquise de Cabris, opened in 1997.
2. Go to Goya in Castres
Good news for art-loving readers in the Southwest. Whilst the Louvre is renovating its rooms dedicated to Spanish and Portuguese art, the in Castres – named after painter Francisco Goya when it became specialised in hispanic art in 1947 – will be presenting four masterpieces from the Golden Age.
Until June 1, the museum is hosting Rodin/Bourdelle. Body to body, an exhibition devoted to sculptor Auguste Rodin (1840–1917) and Antoine Bourdelle (1861–1929), who was twenty years younger than the master and worked as his assistant, carving marble and carrying out practical tasks in the studio before forging a name in his own right.
Composed of more than 170 items (sculptures, drawings, photographs and archive documents), it compares and contrasts 50 years of creation as well as highlighting their influence on the next generation of artists.
Air France, A Story of Elegance gathers more than 170 objects – including couture uniforms, posters, period seats, aircraft models and archive films – to present a history of the French national airline. It seems a far cry from today’s budget airline travel.
No rush to visit – this new temporary exhibition runs until February 2027.
5. Sporting occasions
Sports lovers in France and Monaco are spoilt for choice this month, with two epic events taking place. The French Open tennis tournament at Roland Garros in Paris began on May 19, with the singles finals set for the weekend of June 7–8.
Meanwhile in Monaco, petrol-heads rev up for the iconic Formula 1 street race on Sunday May 25. Tune into Canal + (from France) at 15:00 or Sky Sports/Channel 4 (UK) at 14:00 to follow along.