The Musée de l'école de Nancy is a museum dedicated to the so-called School of Nancy (École di Nancy), the main artistic current of Art Nouveau in France. Founded in 1964, the museum is housed in a large bourgeois house from the end of the 19th century, formerly owned by Eugène Corbin, patron of the movement. The museum collection consists of artistic artifacts made by the artists of the Nancy School, exhibited inside the rooms of the house, which increase the visitor to enter the atmosphere of the time. There are numerous furniture, art objects - often glass or ceramic - and drawings.
In the museum there is also a large garden with an aquarium inside, an oak door made by Émile Gallé and a funerary monument in memory of the wife of the writer Jules Rais.