Château de By

Thomery, France

The Château de By is a town museum run by the town of Thomery. The building was purchased in 1859 by the French animal painter Rosa Bonheur, who moved her studio there. Aged 37, she was at the height of her popularity and made the building her home and studio for forty years, with pens for her animals in its park. She rebuilt the chateau to make it comfortable and to add a vast neo-Gothic studio room with the space and light she needed. It was in the chateau that empress Eugenie presented her with her Légion d'Honneur in 1865.

The museum mainly consists of objects relating to Bonheur's everyday life (including a Native American costume given her by Buffalo Bill) and the building has remained unchanged since her death in 1899, other than the sale of all the paintings it once contained.

References:

Comments

Your name



Details

Founded: 1859
Category: Castles and fortifications in France

Rating

4.6/5 (based on Google user reviews)

User Reviews

Karim Kadry (2 years ago)
Excellent house/museum of Rosa Bonheur the famous French painter .. the place is very authentic and the guide though in French but was very informative .. the tour itself takes about one hour ... though the place is far from other places but it is worthy .. online reservation is required in advance as it is guided only .. for English speakers you can scan a QR code and listen to the commentary
Henri H. Becker (2 years ago)
Just outstanding, great student guide and lots of detailed information. We loved it.
Karen Arends (2 years ago)
Fascinating museum of an artist who absolutely should be more well known! She was a woman before her time, an amazing painter and left a beautiful home that should be visited!
Markalan Wind (2 years ago)
Very cute old mansion that belonged to 19th century painter of animal scenes. Her painting studio feels like a trip back in time. But...no /very few authentic works of the artist and a lot of cheap reproductions...so at 17 EUROS entrance it is pricey for what you get. Some recent attractions border on the gimicky....such as visitors can block print animals on nice paper, and there are some cheap blow-ups of early photographs of her works. Nice tea room and B&b but we did not stay. The current owner acquired the site in 2017 and seems to be gradually upgrading. Her student daughter Lou guided us and showed her passion for the subject making all the difference. Ps on arrival total chaos due to a huge coachload of Dutch tourists arriving at the same time...so Lou saved the day by guiding us through the garden first...
Andrew Salmon (2 years ago)
Enjoy the photos. The interior you can see if you arrive when open. The view from down the hill was worth the visit.
Powered by Google

Featured Historic Landmarks, Sites & Buildings

Historic Site of the week

Argos Theater

The ancient Argos Theater was built in 320 BC. and is located in Argos, Greece against Larissa Hill. Nearby from this site is Agora, Roman Odeon, and the Baths of Argos. The theater is one of the largest architectural developments in Greece and was renovated in ca 120 AD.

The Hellenistic theater at Argos is cut into the hillside of the Larisa, with 90 steps up a steep incline, forming a narrow rectilinear cavea. Among the largest theaters in Greece, it held about 20,000 spectators and is divided by two landings into three horizontal sections. Staircases further divide the cavea into four cunei, corresponding to the tribes of Argos A high wall was erected to prevent unauthorized access into the theatron and may have helped the acoustics, but it is said the sound quality is still very good today.

Around 120 CE, both theaters were renovated in the Roman style.