Top 10 Museums and Galleries
The Louvre Museum as seen through the Louvre Pyramid glass in
Paris, France
Photograph by Horst Friedrichs, Anzenberger/Redux
From the National Geographic book The
10 Best of Everything1. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.
The
Smithsonian is the world’s largest research and museum complex, with 19
museums and galleries, the National Zoological Park, and various research
stations. More than 137 million objects detailing America’s story are housed
here, so you’d better prepare for a long week of walking.
There’s so much to
see that, if you spent one minute day and night looking at each object on
exhibit, in ten years you’d see only ten percent of the whole. Therefore, it’s
wise to head out with a plan. Focus on only one or two exhibits at two or three
different museums.
Main attractions: Dorothy’s ruby
red slippers, the dresses of the First Ladies, and the original Star-Spangled
Banner at the National Museum of American History; the Gem Hall (including the
Hope Diamond) at the National Museum of Natural History; and the Wright
brothers’ 1903 Flyer, the Spirit of St. Louis, and the Apollo 11
command module at the National Air and Space Museum.
2. Le Louvre, Paris, France
The
Louvre was a medieval fortress and the palace of the kings of France before
becoming a museum two centuries ago. The addition of I. M. Pei’s pyramid
shocked many when it was unveiled in 1989 as the new main entrance, yet it
somehow works, integrating the palace’s disparate elements. The museum’s
collections, which range from antiquity to the first half of the 19th century,
are among the most important in the world. A good place to start is the Sully
Wing, at the foundations of Philippe-Auguste’s medieval keep—it’s in the heart of
the Louvre, kids love it, and it leads straight to the Egyptian rooms.
Main attractions: “Venus de
Milo,” “Winged Victory of Samothrace,” and Leonardo da Vinci’s “Mona Lisa.”
3. The Acropolis Museum, Athens, Greece
The stunning ground floor gallery houses finds from the
slopes of the Acropolis. Its amazing transparent glass floor provides a walk
over history, with a view of the archaeological excavation, while sloping
upward to the Acropolis with sanctuaries of the Athenians from each historic
period nearby. Smaller settlements have been excavated, yielding glimpses of
Athenian life. For the first time, the exhibits in the Archaic Gallery allow
visitors to take in all sides of the objects, which are displayed in open
spaces characterized by changing natural light.
Main attractions: The frieze of
the Parthenon is mounted on a structure with exactly the same dimensions as the
cella of the Parthenon, giving comprehensive viewing of every detail.
4. State Hermitage, St. Petersburg, Russia
Russia may be isolated from the artistic centers of Paris,
Rome, and London, but the
Hermitage has managed to acquire a spectacular collection of world art—more
than three million items—spanning the years from the Stone Age to the early
20th century. The museum occupies six buildings along the Neva River, the
leading structure being the confection-like Winter Palace. This gloriously
baroque, blue-and-white structure was finished in 1764 and over the next several
centuries was the main residence of the czars. Catherine the Great founded the
museum that same year when she purchased 255 paintings from Berlin. The
museum’s focal point is Western European art—120 rooms in four buildings
ranging from the Middle Ages to the present day. Rembrandt, Rubens, Tiepolo,
Titian, da Vinci, Picasso, Gauguin, Cézanne, van Gogh, and Goya are all
represented here. For in-depth tours, contact Glories of the Hermitage.
Main attractions: The Treasure
Gallery’s Gold Rooms showcase golden masterpieces from Eurasia, the Black Sea
Littoral in antiquity, and the Orient. The museum also houses pieces from
Nicholas II’s private collection, including paintings, drawings, and medals
created to commemorate his coronation.
5. The British Museum, London, England
Britain’s largest museum looks after the national
collection of archaeology and ethnography—more than eight million objects
ranging from prehistoric bones to chunks of Athens’ Parthenon, from whole
Assyrian palace rooms to exquisite gold jewels.
Main attractions: The Egyptian
gallery boasts the world’s second finest collection of Egyptian antiquities
outside Egypt, including the Rosetta Stone, carved in 196 B.C.
6. The Prado, Madrid, Spain
The Spanish royal family is responsible for the Prado’s bounty of classical
masterpieces. Over centuries, kings and queens collected and commissioned
art with passion and good taste. In addition to stars of Spanish painting such
as Velázquez, Goya, Ribera, and Zurbarán, the Prado has big collections of
Italian (including Titian and Raphael) and Flemish artists. Fernando VII opened
the collection to the public in 1819, in the same neoclassic building it’s
housed in today, designed by Juan de Villanueva.
Main attraction: “The Three
Graces” by Rubens.
7. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City, New York
The
Metropolitan Museum of Art is the largest museum in the Western Hemisphere.
Its collection of more than two million items is not only broad—covering the
entire world, from antiquity to the present—but deep, with holdings so large in
a number of areas that some might be considered museums unto themselves. Its
European paintings are stunning: works by Botticelli, Rembrandt, Vermeer,
Degas, Rodin, and other luminaries. The Egyptian Collection showcases the tomb
of Perneb (circa 2440 B.C.) and the exquisite Temple of Dendur (circa 23-10
B.C.). The American Wing contains American arts and crafts, including a room
from a Frank Lloyd Wright Prairie House. And the list goes on and on.
Main attractions: “Adam and
Eve,” the well-known engraving by Albrecht Dürer, is only one of the many impressive
pieces you will discover at the Met.
8. The Vatican Museums, Vatican City, Italy
Twenty-two separate collections comprise the Musei
Vaticani, each one more spectacular than the next. The most famous are
probably the Museo Pio-Clementino, with its splendid classical sculpture; the
Raphael Rooms, entire rooms painted by Raphael; the Pinacoteca (picture
gallery), which contains the cream of the Vatican’s collection of medieval and
Renaissance paintings; and, of course, Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel. But there
is also the ancient Egyptian exhibits of the Museo Gregoriano Egizio, as well
as the Etruscan offerings of the Museo Gregoriano Etrusco. And that’s just a
start.
Main attractions: The renowned
Sistine Chapel and the Raphael Rooms are not to be missed.
9. The Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
“Great” is an overworked adjective in Italy,
where so many of the country’s monuments and works of art command the highest
praise. In the case of the Galleria degli Uffizi, it barely does justice to a
gallery that holds the world’s finest collection of Renaissance paintings. All
the famous names of Italian art are here—not only the Renaissance masters, but
also painters from the early medieval, baroque, and Mannerist heydays.
Main attraction: “The Birth of
Venus” by Botticelli is one.
10. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
About 900,000 objects fill the Rijksmuseum, the
largest collection of art and history in the Netherlands. It is most famous for its paintings by
17th-century Dutch masters, including Ruysdael, Frans Hals, Johannes Vermeer,
and Rembrandt van Rijn. Established in 1800 to exhibit the collections of the
Dutch stadtholders, the Rijksmuseum also displays art from the Middle Ages. The
main building is closed for renovation until 2013; collection highlights are
displayed in the Philips Wing and at Rijksmuseum Schiphol.
Main attraction: “The Night
Watch” by Rembrandt. Source Article
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