Institut Culturel Bernard Magrez

Bordeaux


Glittering glass chandeliers, parquet flooring, original moulded ceilings and pretty peppermint-green painted wood-panelling create a wonderfully romantic backdrop for the compelling contemporary-art exhibitions held at Château Labottière. The neoclassical chateau was constructed in 1773 for Bordelais brothers Antoine and Jacques Labottière who ran a small printing business in Bordeaux and is owned today by the Bernard Magrez cultural institute.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Bordeaux attractions

1. Palais Gallien

0.47 MILES

It was Celtic tribes who first established Bordeaux, but it wasn't until about 200 years later, under the rule of the Romans, that the town started to…

2. Jardin Public

0.63 MILES

Landscaping is artistic as well as informative at the Jardin Public. Established in 1755 and laid out in the English style a century later, the grounds…

3. Musée Bordeaux – Sciences et Nature

0.63 MILES

With more than one million different specimens on show, Bordeaux's former Natural History Museum is among France's most impressive. Closed at the time of…

4. Basilique St-Seurin

0.71 MILES

It was around this vast Romanesque complex that the quartier of Saint-Seurin grew in the 11th century. As early as the 5th century, a church dedicated to…

5. Site Archéologique de St-Seurin

0.77 MILES

Not to be confused with the small crypt inside Basilique St-Seurin, this archaeological site was uncovered in 1910 when archaeologists excavated part of…

6. Cox Gallery

0.81 MILES

In a city increasingly known for its street art, it was inevitable that a gallery dedicated solely to street art would open. Enter Cox Gallery, with a…

7. Pavé des Chartrons

0.83 MILES

Nowhere is the immense wealth that 18th-century Bordeaux amassed from its port more explicit than on this posh avenue lined with elegant hôtels…

8. Monument aux Girondins

0.88 MILES

This imposing fountain on vast square and public-transport hub Esplanade des Quinconces is a riot of horses. It was created between 1894 and 1902 in…