When visiting the Cluny Museum, you can easily notice that the art in the museum revolves around religious themes. The reason behind this is that before it became a museum, this place used to be a monastery of the Cluny Order. Given that the Cluny Order attempted to incorporate religion within art, obtaining divine revelation through the beauty of art. All these pieces of art served as worshiped objects, and were ways to discovering God. In the museum, you can find many types of art like stained glass windows, gothic sculptures, wood cravings, and tapestries. The wooden and stone sculptures differ from the emotions they transmit. The wooden sculpture transmits the emotions of feeling, while the stone sculpture doesn’t transmit as much. Unfortunately when we visited this museum we didn’t have the privilege to admire the most famous artwork of the museum, which is the “La Dame à la licorne”, because it was not available at the moment. The story behind this famous piece of art is the six famous tapestries. Interpreted as depicting the five senses. Each tapestries is usually referred to by the sense it represent; Taste, Touch, Smell, Sound, Sight. The six one is called “À mon seul désir” meaning “to my only desire” often interpreted as love. Each of the tapestries depicts a noble lady with a unicorn on her left and a lion on her right; some pieces include a monkey in the art scene. Some people say that the last tapestry is a mystery, because it doesn’t really show a meaning. From all the artifacts in the museum, what I mostly enjoyed was the stained glass work in the first floor. I was amazed the beauty of the light going through these glasses. It was one of the shortest museum we visited in all the trip, but I could personally say I had the most beautiful and religious artifacts from any other museum we went.