The Grevan Wax Museum in Paris was founded in the late 18th century, when Arthur Meyer, the founder of the famous Gaul Daily, had a strange idea: he wanted the characters on the front page of his newspaper to walk out of the two-dimensional plane of words and into the three-dimensional space of reality so that their readers could see the real three-dimensional space. Characters. Since photography had not yet been adopted by newspapers and magazines, he planned to create a wax museum where people could see the famous current affairs figures at that time.