Gobelins Manufactory

The factory is open for guided tours several afternoons per week by appointment, as well as for casual visits every day except Mondays and some specific holidays.

The Galerie des Gobelins is dedicated to temporary exhibitions of tapestries from the French manufactures and furnitures from the Mobilier National, built in the gardens by Auguste Perret in 1937.

In 1662, the works in the Faubourg Saint Marcel, with the adjoining grounds, were purchased by Jean-Baptiste Colbert on behalf of Louis XIV and made into a general upholstery factory, in which designs both in tapestry and in all kinds of furniture were executed under the superintendence of the court painter, Charles Le Brun,[2] who served as director and chief designer from 1663–1690.

On account of Louis XIV's financial problems, the establishment was closed in 1694, but reopened in 1697 for the manufacture of tapestry, chiefly for royal use.

They contain Le Brun's residence and workshops that served as foundries for most of the bronze statues in the park of Versailles, as well as looms on which tapestries are woven following seventeenth century techniques.

The Gobelins Manufactory in 2009
Battle of Zama tapestry after Jules Romain , manufactured for Louis XIV in 1688–1690 ( Louvre Museum )
Rear view in 1830 of the Gobelins Manufactory, adjoining the river Bièvre