
The Musée d’art contemporain de Baie-Saint-Paul is a cornerstone of Charlevoix’s cultural identity, built on the foundations of a community that long tied its livelihood to creativity. Rising in 1992 on the site of a defunct cinema, the Pierre Thibault–designed building immediately announced itself as more than an exhibition hall. Its glass façade faces the town’s church, blurring sacred and civic space, while its vast galleries recall the cinema’s original volume.
The museum’s first director, Françoise Labbé—artist, advocate, and lifelong resident—transformed Baie-Saint-Paul into a national centre for contemporary art, launching the International Symposium that continues to draw creators from around the world.
Today, the institution balances its collection of Quebec masters with a mandate to showcase emerging voices, keeping pace with new movements while anchoring itself in a region where painters once came for the light. It remains the only museum east of Quebec City devoted exclusively to contemporary art.
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