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

An original institution first mentioned in 1281, its uninterrupted history is closely linked to the fate of Strasbourg Cathedral, as well as to the dissemination of arts and ideas, knowledge and techniques throughout Europe. The collections of the Oeuvre Notre-Dame de Strasbourg still enjoy an undisputed reputation at both the national and international levels.

Located in Erstein, 20 minutes from Strasbourg, in the heart of the Alsatian countryside, the Würth Museum offers temporary exhibitions throughout the year revealing works from the exceptional collection of German entrepreneur Reinhold Würth.

Sarreguemines earthenware is a ceramic production that developed from 1790 to 2007 in the town of Sarreguemines in Lorraine. Let yourself be amazed by the earthenware makers' treasures by visiting this beautiful museum.

Dynastic necropolis of the House of Lorraine and emblematic place of ducal power, the Church of the Cordeliers in Nancy houses the Notre-Dame-de-Lorette chapel built above the vault where many members of the ducal family are buried.

With nearly 10,000 works, the collection includes masterpieces of German Expressionism and Surrealism, important groups of geometric abstraction and neo-figurative painting from the 1980s.

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.

One of the most beautiful collections of printed fabrics in the world. The museum traces the technical and artistic history of Indian weaving in Alsace, as well as fabrics that come straight from India, Africa and Japan.