In 1861 Mongkut sent an embassy in return, which was ceremonially received on 27 June 1861 by Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie in the great 16th-century ballroom of the Palace of Fontainebleau, that was one of their favorite residences.
History
About 300[4] or 400[5] objects from the Beijing Summer Palace looting of 1860, many dating from the reign of the Qianlong Emperor, were presented by French officers to the Imperial household as a personal gift. They were initially displayed at the Imperial apartment at the Tuileries Palace. Eugénie combined some of them with the Siam embassy gifts of 1861 to form the core of the Asian art collection she would display in Fontainebleau, which she complemented with other diplomatic and non-diplomatic gifts, objects confiscated by the state during the French Revolution and kept since then at the National Library,[6] and acquisitions she made on the art market using the Imperial household's personal budget. In addition to Chinese and Siamese artifacts she added objects from Cambodia, Japan, Korea, and Tibet.[7][8]
Eugénie intended the museum as a private space where she would entertain guests and friends, rather than a public exhibition space. She located it on the ground floor of the gros pavillon, a garden-facing building of the palace. The rooms were redecorated by palace architect Alexis Paccard.[9] The main exhibition room is decorated with lacquer and 18th-century folding screen panels. The adjacent drawing room includes a billiard table and a piano for entertainment. The whole suite was inaugurated by the empress on 14 June 1863.[9]
The museum has been preserved in a layout largely similar to that of the 1860s. In 1905, it received additional objects from the ethnographical collections of the Musée de Marine, then hosted in the Louvre and short of space there.[10] It was renovated in 1988.[9]
Robberies
There was a robbery at the museum in 1995, with fifteen objects stolen of which nine were later recovered.[11]
In the early hours of 1 March 2015, the museum was robbed of 15-20 precious Chinese and Siamese objects, including a ceremonial crown that was the centerpiece of the Siamese gift package of 1861.[9][12]
In a 2018 article published in GQ, journalist Alex W. Palmer suggests a connection between the 2015 robbery and the longstanding promotion by the Chinese party/state of emotional grievances about the Second Opium War and especially the objects looted from the Old Summer Palace.[13]
Yet another robbery attempt was stopped by authorities in 2019.[14][15]
Gallery
The gros pavillon houses the Chinese Museum on its ground floor