"The function of the museum is to make good, not to make scholarly." Serge Chaumier, Altermuseology, ed. Hermann, 2018

In Lorraine, at the heart of the largest factories as well as confidential workshops, the secrets of crystal, the art of glass, ceramics and even violin making are revealed.

This French museum preserves the most important public collection of earthenware signed by Théodore Deck.

It's hard to imagine that less than a century ago MoMA was just an idea backed by a few wealthy women eager to introduce the European avant-garde to an American audience.

La Fenice in Venice is still one of the most prestigious theatres in the world.

Built in 1340, the Doge's Palace was the seat of power and symbol of wealth during the glory of the Venetian Republic.

The title of Pantheon of the Italians is linked to the presence, inside the Basilica of Santa Croce, of about 258 funerary monuments that pay homage to great Florentine, Tuscan, Italian and foreign personalities.