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Works from French museums — Joconde catalog

This catalog gathers over 300,000 digitized works from the Joconde database of the Ministry of Culture: paintings, sculptures, drawings, photographs, archaeological objects, and decorative arts conserved in 1,220 labeled "Museum of France" museums. Search by title, artist, or technique.

106 Results for « Pradier James »

Le duc d'Orléans sur son lit de mort

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Apothéose de Napoléon

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

La Poésie légère

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Apollon lycien et fragment de torse féminin antique

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Autoportrait de profil

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Etude pour Sapho assise

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Feuille d'étude

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Figure de femme drapée

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

PRADIER James
musée des Beaux-Arts
sculpture

Projet de statue à Le Verrier

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Feuille d'étude

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Autoportrait de profil

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing
Achille-Cléophas Flaubert

Achille-Cléophas Flaubert

PRADIER James
musée Flaubert et d'histoire de la médecine
sculpture

Maternité ou La Vierge à l'Enfant. Portrait présumé de Louise Pradier et de son…

PRADIER James
musée des beaux-arts et d'archéologie
beaux-arts, peinture

Trois barques au bord de la plage

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing
Caroline Hamard

Caroline Hamard

PRADIER James
musée Flaubert et d'histoire de la médecine
sculpture
Molière

Molière

PRADIER James
château musées
sculpture

Feuille d'étude

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Feuille d'étude

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

La Villa Medicis à Rome

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Feuille d'études de statue

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Baigneuse assisse sur un rocher

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Feuille d'étude

PRADIER James
musée du Louvre
drawing

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know

The Joconde database from the Ministry of Culture lists approximately 700,000 records of works preserved in French museums. On dellarte.fr, more than 300,000 records with digitized images are accessible. This number increases regularly as digitization programs progress.

The Joconde database is the collective catalog of collections from French museums, managed by the Ministry of Culture. It catalogues artworks and patrimonial objects from museums labeled 'Museum of France' and is freely accessible at data.culture.gouv.fr under Open License v2.0.

The Joconde database covers all artistic and patrimonial fields: painting, sculpture, drawing, printmaking, photography, archaeology, decorative arts, ceramics, goldsmithing, numismatics, ethnology, furniture, textile, and many others.

The availability of images depends on each museum and the rights associated with the work. Many records include a photograph of the work; others only provide a textual description, especially for works still under copyright.

Use the search bar to find a piece by its title, artist's name, technique used, or the museum that preserves it. The search covers all available records.

No. Only part of the collections are digitized and listed in the Joconde database. Museums continue digitization efforts; the number of records available online increases each year.

Textual data (title, author, technique, period, museum) are published under Open License v2.0 (Etalab) and can be freely reused. Images are subject to specific rights depending on the work and the museum.

Since the data comes from the Joconde database, corrections should be reported directly to the Ministry of Culture via data.culture.gouv.fr. You can also contact us to relay your report.

Yes. Enter a period in the search bar — for example, ‘17th century’, ‘Renaissance’, or ‘contemporary art’ — to filter works by their creation period.

Yes. The Joconde database lists works from all eras, from Prehistory to contemporary art. Collections from modern art museums and FRAC (Regional Contemporary Art Funds) also contribute.