Bargoin Museum

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Bargoin Museum
Musée Bargoin
Musee bargoin clermont-fd 2.jpg
West facade of the Bargoin museum.
Bargoin Museum
Established1903 (1903)
LocationClermont-Ferrand
Coordinates 45°46′26″N3°05′14″E / 45.77400°N 3.08736°E / 45.77400; 3.08736
TypeArchaeological museum
CollectionsArchaeology, textiles
Visitors17891 (2019)
ArchitectJoseph Dionnet
Website www.clermontmetropole.eu/bouger-se-divertir/le-dynamisme-culturel/les-musees-de-clermont-auvergne-metropole/musee-bargoin/

The Bargoin Museum is a heritage museum in Clermont-Ferrand, in France. It mainly exhibits archaeological collections and textiles.

Contents

Geographical placement

The Bargoin Museum is in Clermont-Ferrand, at the intersection of Ballainvilliers street and Lafayette boulevard, near the rectorate, the Jardin Henri-Lecoq  [ fr ] and the Henri-Lecoq Museum  [ fr ]. [1]

History

The museum is named after Jean-Baptiste Bargoin  [ fr ], a wealthy industrialist from Clermont-Ferrand who in 1885 bequeathed part of his fortune to the city, with the aim of founding a museum. [1]

The building was designed by architect Joseph Dionnet. Its façade is adorned with marble bas-reliefs representing the Arts, by sculptor P. Gray, and railings by ironworker Bernardin. [1]

Designed in the 19th century to showcase fine art collections, the museum has also housed numerous archaeological finds since its inauguration in 1903. [1]

With the relocation of its art collections to the new Roger-Quilliot Art Museum  [ fr ] at the end of the 20th century, the Bargoin Museum moved its archaeological collection to larger spaces, reserving the second floor for the “Carpets and Textile Arts” collection. [1]

Long a municipal museum, the Bargoin Museum is now part of the Clermont Auvergne Métropole. [1]

In 2016, on the occasion of the “Rebelles” exhibition, graffiti artists Deft, Beame414, Waro Tkn Fwt, Rino, and Epok from the ENDtoEND collective created a chalk spray painting on the façades of the Bargoin Museum. [2]

Archaeological collections

The first floor is devoted to archaeology, covering the periods of Prehistory, ancient history, and, to a lesser extent, the Middle Ages. [3]

Archaeological collections come mainly from excavations and discoveries made in the Clermont-Ferrand area, and more widely in the Puy-de-Dôme region. [3]

The museum also stores several Roman, Etruscan and Greek objects from the collections of 19th- and 20th-century Clermont-Ferrand scholars, enthusiasts and antique dealers. [4]

Skeleton of the "young girl of Cheix" Jeune fille du Cheix, Musee Bargoin (Clermont-Ferrand).jpg
Skeleton of the “young girl of Cheix”

Prehistoric and protohistoric collections

The museum presents a collection of lithics from excavations at the Durif shelter, a Magdalenian site in Enval (Vic-le-Comte). [3]

A notable item in the prehistoric collections is the “young girl of Cheix”, the skeleton of a young girl buried in the fetal position, found in 1938 in the Shelter of Cheix  [ fr ], in Saint-Diéry, and dating from the Early Neolithic. This is the oldest known skeleton in Auvergne. [5]

Design of the room devoted to the archaeological collections Salle des antiquites au Musee Bargoin a Clermont Ferrand.jpg
Design of the room devoted to the archaeological collections

For the Bronze Age, the most remarkable collection is the Manson deposit (Saint-Genès-Champanelle), discovered in 1873. It comprises around a hundred bronze objects, including weapons and ornaments. [3]

The museum also holds some rare ceramics with zoomorphic decoration, dating from the 2nd century BC and probably made locally. These were intended for serving drinks. [4]

Gallo-Roman antiquities

Bronze foot discovered in 2006 Bronze foot discovered in 2006, Musee Bargoin, Clermont-Ferrand, France (48715424466).jpg
Bronze foot discovered in 2006

The museum is particularly well stocked with Gallo-Roman remains from various local excavations. The Martres-de-Veyre  [ fr ] necropolis, excavated in the second half of the 19th century, yielded five tombs in an excellent state of preservation, along with various organic archaeological remains (textiles, leather, human remains). [3]

One of the highlights of the collection is a monumental bronze foot, discovered in 2006 during an archaeological survey on the site of the former Clermont-Ferrand bus station  [ fr ]. Unfortunately, subsequent preventive excavations failed to uncover any further elements of this colossal statue, which is estimated to have measured between 2.70 and 3.50 metres and to have required between 400 and 450 kg of metal. It was probably an imperial commission to adorn a public monument in Augustonemetum. [6]

Statuette of the god Mercury from the Temple de Mercure at the summit of the Puy de Dome Statuette de Mercure du temple de Mercure du Puy-de-Dome, Musee Bargoin.jpg
Statuette of the god Mercury from the Temple de Mercure at the summit of the Puy de Dôme

Some of the objects in the Roman collections come from finds made in the ruins of the temple of Mercury at the summit of the Puy de Dôme, uncovered in 1873 during construction of the meteorological observatory. These furnishings date from 120–130 AD. [3]

The Gallo-Roman ex-voto collection at Chamalières' Source des Roches  [ fr ] is on display in the basement. The collection comprises 10,000 fragments from around 3,500 wooden ex-votos carved between 30 BC and 100 AD. The collection's diversity and exceptional state of preservation make it a benchmark. A lead tablet discovered on the site is important for studies on the Gaulish language. [3]

Textile art collections

The two upper floors showcase the museum's textile art collections. From Central Asia to North Africa and Central America, the Bargoin Museum's textile collections explore a wide range of non-European heritage pieces from the 18th to the 21st century. Due to their fragility, these pieces are rotated for exhibition. [3]

Since 2012, the Bargoin Museum has co-produced an exhibition with the HS_Projets association every two years as part of the Festival international des textiles extraordinaires  [ fr ] (FITE). An international edition of this exhibition[ vague ] is held in odd-numbered years. [3]

Exhibitions

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Musée Bargoin" [Bargoin Museum]. www.clermontmetropole.eu (in French). 2025-01-20. Retrieved 2025-02-19.
  2. "Façades du Musée Bargoin" [Facades of the Bargoin Museum]. ENDtoEND (in French). 2016-10-04. Retrieved 2025-02-19.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 "Les Collections du musée Bargoin" [The Bargoin Museum Collections]. Clermont Auvergne Métropole (in French). 2025-01-13. Retrieved 2025-02-19.
  4. 1 2 Gaudiat, Jean-Claude (2005). Céramiques grecques, étrusques, italiotes et romaines du Musée d'archéologie Bargoin à Clermont-Ferrand[Greek, Etruscan, Italic and Roman ceramics from the Bargoin Museum of Archaeology, Clermont-Ferrand] (in French). Clermont-Ferrand: Musée d'archéologie Bargoin.
  5. Desrut, Georges (1939). "Découverte d'une grotte et d'un squelette magdalénien au Cheix, près Besse-en-Chandesse (Puy-de-Dôme)" [Discovery of a cave and a Magdalenian skeleton at Cheix, near Besse-en-Chandesse (Puy-de-Dôme)]. Bulletin de la Société préhistorique française (in French). 36 (2): 132–142. doi:10.3406/bspf.1939.12338.
  6. Mille, Benoît; Darblade-Audoin, Maria-Pia (2012), Denoyelle, Martine; Descamps-Lequime, Sophie; Verger, Stéphane (eds.), "Le pied colossal de bronze de Clermont-Ferrand et la question de l'atelier de Zénodore" [The colossal bronze foot from Clermont-Ferrand and the question of Zenodore's workshop], Bronzes grecs et romains, recherches récentes. Hommage à Claude Rolley, Voies de la recherche (in French), Paris: Publications de l’Institut national d’histoire de l’art, ISBN   978-2-917902-66-0 , retrieved 2025-02-19

Bibliography

Bargoin Museum's publications