Atger Museum of Graphic Arts

This museum of graphic arts is the oldest fine arts museum in Montpellier. Established following a donation by collector Xavier Atger, it features a collection of drawings and prints depicting people in all their forms—works that are particularly useful for health science students in developing their powers of observation. The museum is currently closed for renovation.

Starting in 1813, the faculty received a donation from Xavier Atger consisting of a priceless collection of 1,000 drawings by master artists and 5,000 prints. The city’s oldest fine arts museum had found a home… in a medical school!

The point was that it was designed to foster students’ powers of observation so that they could grasp the expression of human emotions in all their subtleties.

Inthe 21st century, psychiatry professors still bring their residents there, and when an anesthesiology and critical care professor develops a scale in his department to assess pain-related behavior in comatose patients, he still sometimes shows them—on his smartphone—Milon of Croton being devoured by a lion, a17th-century red chalk drawing from the museum’s collection!

Since 2023, a collection of graphic novels (B.D.) created by patients has been established at the university library of the Faculty at both the Montpellier and Nîmes campuses. By 2025, it included nearly 125 titles, providing a window into patients’ experiences—particularly the caregiver-patient relationship, which involves a great deal of observation, interpersonal skills, and nonverbal communication—all of which are perfectly captured through graphic art.

Download the brochure introducing this collection of narrative medical comics: