The Musée d'art moderne André Malraux (MuMa Le Havre) is a modern art museum in Le Havre with a prestigious collection of Impressionist and Fauve paintings. The museum is named after the writer André Malraux who, at the time Minister of Culture, made this museum one of his priority projects and inaugurated it in 1961. The Museum is currently housed in an innovative architecture glazed on five sides and preceded in a square by a monumental sculpture, Le Signal, created by the sculptor Henri Georges Adam. The rich collection includes works, often portraying the city of Le Havre, by authors such as Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Sisley, Courbet, Corot and several others. The MuMa organizes temporary exhibitions every year, of which at least one of international importance, in the space dedicated to the permanent collections of the first level of the museum. These exhibitions are the result of specific programming and numerous cultural initiatives for all kinds of audiences (guided tours, ateliers, conferences, films, music, theater, dance, etc.).