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Museums and Culture

20 Must-See Museums

A World of Culture Awaits You

 By Hayden Foreman-Smith

museum
The National Gallery of Canada is just one of 20 must-see museums on our list. View the museums slide show.

Twenty museums. One lifetime. You can do it!

20.  National Gallery of Canada; Ottawa

This museum has a great collection of art spanning the Middles Ages to the present day, including (where applicable) American, Indian, European, Inuit and Canadian works. In keeping with its 'national' status, particular focus has been put on its Canadian and Inuit collections over the years, to the great benefit of us all, and not simply Canadians. Here is a space in which the old, traditional world thrives among the new of modern North America. It offers a unique, near-complete overview of Canadian art - from early Quebec religious work, through Inuit work from the 1950s, to avant-garde contemporaries, via the well-represented Group Of Seven, whose passion in the early 20th century was to create an art that derived exclusively from Canada and its sublime landscapes. The successful fruits of their labor captured the spirit of a country, and are now displayed on these walls. It is the aboriginal work that carries the most impact; created by people living in some of the harshest environments on Earth, their delicate lines and vibrant colors, seen in the air-conditioned space of the National Gallery, narrate what is clearly a universal story of survival, hope and happiness.
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380 Sussex Drive, Ottowa, Ontario, K1N 9N4 > www.gallery.ca


 

19.  The Shrine of the Book, The Israel Museum; Jerusalem

The Shrine of the Book's collection contains some of the most important cultural artifacts and documents in existence pertaining to the history of Christianity. Although the manuscripts are never on display in their entirety due to their sensitivity to light, there is always some part to see. The exhibition 'A Day at Qumran' tells the story of the people behind the scrolls - the Essenes - and something of their day-to-day existence 2,000 years ago, the sources for which include the Qumran scrolls on display. It is these important documents that form the basis for what we now (disagreements aside) understand to be the face of religion in this period - the birth of Christianity. The Shrine of the Book also holds the earliest known full text of the Bible (the 'Aleppo Codex'). The housing for these rare and unique manuscripts is also without parallel. The building is symbolic of its location and purpose: the dome mirrors the caps that sealed some of the scroll containers, its gleaming white façade is in stark contrast to the black basalt wall opposite representing the "sons of light" and "sons of darkness" outlined in the scrolls; the main corridor resembles a cave, like the one in which the manuscripts were first discovered.
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POB 71117, Jerusalem, 91710 > www.imj.org.il


 

18.  Museo Nacional de AntropologíaMexico City

Mexico has one of the most vibrant and colorful cultures on Earth. Some of the crafts and social practices in the country have been passed down over thousands of years, and this museum is a unique and relevant setting in which to experience that transition. The vast building is one of the most accomplished museum environments in the world; its inventive 20-acre plot in Chapultepec Park is full of foliage, waterfalls, pools and statues. Downstairs is an incomparable display of pre-Columbian art, upstairs an excellent collection of Mexican folk art (some contemporary), and throughout you'll find the work of recent Mexican artists and sculptors. Highlights include the colossal, powerfully silent Olmec heads, Mayan stone stelae carvings, a human-sacrificial altar, evocative temple reconstructions, tiled skulls, the imaginative female Aztec Coatlicue statue and the great Sun Stone - a 1-foot, 26-ton carved stone calendar detailing both the creation and perceived end of the Aztec world.
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Avenida Paseo de la Reforma, Colonia Chapultepec Polanco, Mexico City > www.mna.inah.gob.mx


 

17.  Mauritshuis; The Hague, Netherlands

We've gone out on a limb with this one. The Mauritshuis may not have the encyclopedic scope of many of the other museums in this list, nor are its holdings as extensive (about 730 paintings, 50 miniatures and 20 sculptures). However, what it does exceptionally well is play to its strengths - in this case, pictures from the 17th-century Dutch Golden Age. Housed in one of the most beautiful examples of elegant 17th-century Dutch classical architecture, the museum is bordered on two sides by water, with a refreshingly calm 18th-century interior (the original interior was destroyed by fire). Seeing the works on display here makes for a warm and intimate experience. Dutch painting of this period benefits from being viewed in such an environment, at a leisurely pace, so its narrative and symbolism can be unraveled slowly. Three pieces in particular have ripened in this palace on the pond. Vermeer's 'View of Delft' miraculously handles real light and atmosphere in paint and conveys an overwhelming sense of rest; at a quick glance it also appears to describe the museum and its immediate environs. The acute contrasts between dark and light in Rubens' 'Old Woman and Boy with Candles' makes for a intensely intimate work and one the artist was personally and particularly fond of (he never sold it). Finally, Vermeer's 'Girl With a Pearl Earring' features one of the most magnetic gazes in art. In fact, you may spend most of your time in this museum staring at this exceptional work.
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Korte Vijverberg 8, NL 2513, The Hague > www.mauritshuis.nl


 

16.  Tokugawa Art Museum; Nagoya, Japan

To many Western minds, Japan is an alien place. It's a distant, proud and ancient land full of intriguing, little-understood customs and awesome, time-proven creative - and destructive - power. All these elements, which make up the legend of Japan, are combined in the setting and holdings of the Tokugawa Art Museum. The Tokugawa family reigned over Japan from 1600 to 1868. Under them, the country enjoyed the longest period of peace in its history. This time span is also known as the Edo period, during which the arts flowered in Japan. Artists of this period directly influenced Western masters such as Manet, Gauguin and Whistler and have since gone on to become household names (think Hokusai and his 'Great Wave off Kanagawa,' one of the most famous images of all time). Other exhibits (many registered 'National Treasures') effectively present and contextualize, through accurately reproduced environments, aspects of Japanese life at the time. They include exquisite samurai swords and armor, pottery, clothing, Noh theater masks, detailed paintings and screens, and the jewel in the museum's crown: the 12th-century hand-painted scroll illustrating the 'Tale of Genji.'
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1017 Tokugawa-cho, Higashi-ku, Nagoya 461-0023 > www.tokugawa-art-museum.jp


 

15.  Kimbell Art Museum; Fort Worth, Texas

From the colors in a painting to the presence of a sculpture in a room, the most important element in the assessment of a space in which to view art is light - its type, quality and quantity. Natural light is by far the best kind (it is, after all, the light by which the majority of the world's art has been created), and the Kimbell Art Museum has it in spades. Designed by one of the world's greatest architects - Louis I. Kahn - it is one of the few buildings (let alone museums) in the world that actually enhances your experience of the art it holds inside. The secret lies in the silver metal reflectors that relay the light from the sky outside, across the ceilings and down the walls. Such an abundance of natural light, the airy, spacious exhibition halls and the sunken Zen-like sculpture garden outside (by Japanese-American landscape architect Isamu Noguchi) make for a most relaxing visit. Its permanent collection is tiny but superb. It includes works by Duccio, Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Picasso, Monet and Van Gogh, as well as more international holdings wide in both age range and geographical spread. Its small size has not limited the Kimbell from holding a place of repute on the world art circuit, as its superlative technical display facilities mean it often hosts the finest touring exhibitions in the world.
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3333 Camp Bowie Blvd., Fort Worth, Texas 76107-2792 > www.kimbellart.org


 

14.  Museum of Fine Arts; Boston

The MFAB has one of the most comprehensive collections of art in the world. Like the Met in New York, it has strengths in Oceanic, African, American, Egyptian, ancient, European and contemporary art. It also counts among its belongings musical instruments, fashion artifacts, statuary, sculpture, photography, prints and drawings. Highlights include American period rooms, a grand rotunda lined with Sargent's expert portraiture, an intense, fervent fourth-century Christian marble bust of St. Paul at prayer, and a sumptuous painting that questions life and our very existence, Gauguin's 'Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?.' However, the jewel in the MFAB's crown is without doubt its Asian galleries. Here, in its curators' own words, lies "the creative achievement of half the world's population since 4,000 B.C." Included in these galleries are such rare and diverse items as Japanese postcards (20,000 of them), the largest collection of Japanese pottery outside Japan, Tibetan paintings, early photos of Japan (some as early as 1868), Chinese funerary arts and Korean ceramics. To help you plan your time effectively in advance, the museum's Web site has a searchable, illustrated database.
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Avenue of the Arts, 465 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115-5597 > www.mfa.org

 


13.  Museo Nacional del Prado; Madrid, Spain

You can't blame the Prado for beaming with national pride. It contains the world's greatest collection of Spanish paintings (from the 12th to 19th centuries), though only a third of its artwork is ever on display. The masters Velasquez and Goya are especially well represented, yet the Prado's collection of foreign works is strong too, attesting to the historical strength of Spain. For centuries Spain ruled the Low Countries and some parts of Italy, and strong works from these locations are present: Rogier can der Weyden's 'Deposition,' Rubens' 'St.George and the Dragon,' Brueghel the Elder's nightmarish 'The Triumph of Death' and Bosch's rightly famous 'Garden of Unearthly Delights' are each more than worth the entrance fee alone. It's best, however, to take the opportunity and stay in the company of Goya and Velasquez for the duration of your stay. Don't miss 'The Third of May' and 'Saturn Devouring his Children' by Goya and Velasquez's 'The Surrender of Braeda' and his famous oil 'The Handmaidens.'
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Paseo del Prado, Madrid, 28014 > museoprado.mcu.es


 

12.  The Museum of Modern Art; New York

Founded by three wealthy women in 1929 as the first museum to ever be dedicated solely to modern art, MoMA was, from the get-go, something different. It has become the greatest and most complete collection on Earth of late 19th- and early 20th-century art, and often wows with its more recent acquisitions and temporary exhibitions. Its name is now synonymous with strength and quality in its field. Its home, thanks to Japanese architect Yoshio Tanaguchi, is as much a work of clean, spacious (630,000 feet) art as its collection. Here you'll come across world heavyweights like Dali's 'Persistence of Memory,' Monet's 'Water Lillies,' Picasso's 'Demoiselles d'Avignon,' Pollock's enormous drip paintings and Matisse's 'The Dancers.' The museum in addition houses true classics of design, including an E-Type Jaguar and Bell helicopter, as well as photographic and film works by such greats as Ansel Adams and Orson Welles. There are also perceptive contemporary pieces to be found, such as the eternal, delicate graphite wave studies of Vija Celmins. One last thing to mention: If you're visiting MoMA and have seen Manhattan from atop the Empire State Building, you'll be familiar with Mondrian's 'Broadway Boogie Woogie' - it's New York City summed up in 50 x 50 inches.
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11 West 53rd Street, New York, NY 10019-5497 > www.moma.org


 

11.  The Egyptian Museum; Cairo, Egypt

As well as gathering together some of the finest archaeological finds from all Egypt (and therefore the world), this museum also provides a rare opportunity to simply pop in and within minutes be standing face-to-face with one of the greatest works of mankind, Tutankhamun's golden mask. A portrait of unbelievable quality, craftsmanship and beauty, the highly polished gold face - at once a god, a king and a teenager - glistens like water; delicate, magnetic yet untouchable all at the same time. Once you've recuperated from seeing this beauty, stroll at your leisure through the remaining trove of treasures from his tomb (all 5,000 of them) and make a point of seeing two more objects. The Narmer Palette, the earliest stone carving in the collection, tells the tale, visually, of Egypt's first pharaoh crushing his enemies. Later works on the first floor, the statues of Ahkenaten (King Tut's father), tell of the awesome power of the rulers of this ancient land; Ahkenaten single-handedly, and for the first time, strived to create a form of monotheism in Egypt and a revolution in the way he and his family should be depicted (he really did look that strange!). The theory is that he was killed for such controversies, and the high priests did their best to strike any evidence of his name from all earlier history.
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Midan El Tahrir, Cairo, 11557 > www.egyptianmuseum.gov.eg




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Pictures: Courtesy of MASS MoCA | Credit: C.Philippot | Courtesy of Photographers' Gallery

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