Top 10 Art Museums in Mediterranean, Mediterranean

February 25, 2022 Stefan Strunk

Discover the best top things to do in Mediterranean, Mediterranean including Palazzo Colonna - Galleria Colonna, Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation, Palazzo Barberini, Joan Miro Foundation, Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Centrale Montemartini, Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Altemps, Musei Capitolini, Museo Nazionale di Castel Sant'Angelo, Museum of Cycladic Art.
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1. Palazzo Colonna - Galleria Colonna

Via della Pilotta 17, 00187 Rome Italy +39 06 678 4350 [email protected] http://www.galleriacolonna.it/
Excellent
85%
Good
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Satisfactory
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5.0 based on 813 reviews

Palazzo Colonna - Galleria Colonna

Right in the center of Rome, close to Piazza Venezia, Palazzo Colonna is one of the greatest Barocco Palaces of the eternal city. The impressive Colonna's Collections of paintings, sculptures and furniture from the 14th to the 18th century are unique and part of the roman history. The Colonna Gallery is open to the public every Saturday morning from 9 am to 1,15 pm (last entrance) from Via della Pilotta 17. All other days, including Saturday afternoon, private visits by appointment. Free guided tour (every Saturday): - in Italian at 10.00 And 11.00 Am - in French at 10.30 Am - in English at 12 am Private visits on request are available every day of the year. We also recommend a visit to the stunning Princess Isabelle Apartment with its incredible Van Wittel and Flemish Collections and the Pinturicchio frescoes.

Reviewed By Danielbb - Zurich, Switzerland

Recommended for the ones who have visited all the major attractions in Rome and are looking for THE insider tip. Not a cheap attraction but every euro worth (EUR 25). For a full-mind-blowing experience, do it with the guided tour IT-EN named “Isotta”. This is a privately owned palace of the Roman aristocracy that turned into a gallery opened for visiting on Saturdays only (or private tours). Impressive main gallery with frescos, paintings, sculptures, mirrors and many other beautiful decorating objects. Resembles Versailles without the mass-tourists. The Palace looks good on pictures but live it is definitively much better. The apartments contain many other impressive rooms, with centuries of history and other curious remarks, just like in a fairy tale or children book. The palace itself was beautiful, but the guide turned the experience mind-blowing. Our guide, Isotta, an English-fluent local, impeccably guided us through the marvelous palace and the private apartment rooms, cherry-picking the most important and astonishing art pieces. She also informed dates, styles, artists and commissioners that let me jaw-dropped, specially baring in mind that the whole tour took more than 1h30min. Five star gallery with a five star guide! Highly recommended.

2. Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation

Eratosthenous 13, Athens 11635 Greece +30 21 0725 2895 [email protected] http://www.goulandris.gr
Excellent
90%
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5.0 based on 60 reviews

Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation

The museum of the Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation in Athens houses the Foundation's rare Collection of modern and contemporary art, with works by Cézanne, Monet, Picasso, Van Gogh, El Greco, Chagall, Rodin, Miró, Parthenis, Tetsis, Tsarouchis, Moralis and will also hold temporary exhibitions of Greek and foreign artists. Apart from exhibition spaces, the museum - with a total surface area of 7,250 m2 spread over 11 floors - also houses a shop and Café - Restaurant, art library, children’s workshop and a state-of-the-art auditorium. Concerts, theatrical productions, discussions, activities for children and adults and educational workshops complement the Basil & Elise Goulandris Foundation philosophy, in a series of innovative events harmoniously incorporated in the museum setting.

Reviewed By amazing008 - Thessaloniki, Greece

I was very proud of my "acquaintance" with the Museum of the Basil & Eliza Goulandris Foundation . "Jewel" not only for Athens but also for the whole country, this precious gift of the couple who loved the art and wanted to share it with the general public by giving him a wonderful collection unique works of art that he has fought in many cases to obtain. Almost fifty years ago, Basil and Eliza Goulandris made their legendary collection — one of the most important private collectionscreated in the second half of the 20th century - with patience and longing to be exhibited at the museum But it was not easy! It took a long time (27 years !!!!) to negotiate, postpone, frustrate until the doors of the "jewelry" museum open. In an imposing building that balances between neoclassical and modern, a few meters from Kallimarmaro it was housed the dream of Basil and Eliza Goulandris, 180 works and objects by creators whose name alone provokes an "uproar" for art lovers, creators who never imagined they would come to Greece and they adorned the walls of a Greek museum. Works by Dominic Theotokopoulos, Paul Cézanne (the first artist to purchase the couple), Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Goggen, Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Pablo Picasso, Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Pierre Bonar, Georges Braque, Juan Miro, Vasili Kandinsky, Paul Clay, Jackson Pollock, Francis Bacon, Alberto Giacometti, Mark Sagall, Cesar, Ben Nicholson, Giorgio de Quirico and others find visitors on the 1st and 2nd floors. On the 3rd and 4th floor Greek artists such as Constantine Parthenis, Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Gikas, Giannis Tsarouchis, George Bouzianis, Giannis Moralis, Giannis Gaitis, Panagiotis Tetsis ,, Dimitris Mytaras, Alekos Fassianos, George Zogolopoulos , Sofia Vari, George Rorris, Pavlos Samios, Michalis Tombros, Sotiris Sorongas, Kostas Tsoklis ... "get to know" the visitors. One room is dedicated - by the Goulandris couple - to their important collection of French furniture and artifacts. You are amazed at the furniture from their Paris apartment — including Vasilis Goulandris's office — dating from the 18th century as well as unique aesthetic Chinese artifacts from jade and porcelain. And "bow" with respect to the front in their portrait (crafted by George Rorris), thanking them mentally for their great contribution.

3. Palazzo Barberini

Via delle Quattro Fontane 13, 00184 Rome Italy +39 06 6880 2323 [email protected] http://www.barberinicorsini.org
Excellent
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4.5 based on 1,057 reviews

Palazzo Barberini

Roman palace worth visiting for its splendor and collection of art, especially its gigantic ceiling fresco of clouds and swirling figures by Italian painter-architect Pietro da Cortona.

Reviewed By AndreaF_11

The place offers an extended timetable. The building itself is made by famous Italian artist. The pictures2 collection is a must for any Italian art lover. Pictures are allowed and picture2s display is very attractive and done with charm. Guercino and Piero di Cosimo pictures as Medieval display are quite attractive. Do not miss if you love Italian art.

4. Joan Miro Foundation

Parc de Montjuic, s/n, 08038 Barcelona Spain +34 934 43 94 70 [email protected] http://www.fmirobcn.org
Excellent
57%
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Satisfactory
8%
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4.5 based on 3,971 reviews

Joan Miro Foundation

The Fundació Joan Miró was created by Miró himself, at first principally with works from his own private collection, with a desire to set up an internationally recognised centre in Barcelona for Miró scholarship and contemporary art research, and to disseminate the collection. The Fundació opened to the public on 10 June 1975 and has since become a dynamic centre in which Joan Miró's work coexists with cutting-edge contemporary art. With an interdisciplinary approach, the Fundació organises temporary exhibitions of 20th and 21st century artists as well as academic activities and projects in collaboration with other institutions and organisations. Through its exhibition and educational programmes, the Fundació Joan Miró explores lines of research linked to the work of Miró and to contemporary art. The Fundació is located in a building designed by Josep Lluís Sert, making it one of the few museums anywhere in the world in which the complicity between artist and architect underpins the dialogue between the works and the space that houses them. The Fundació offers an overview of the landscapes of Joan Miró's art and life, creating an enriching dialogue with other artists from the 20th and 21st centuries.

Reviewed By markj309 - Ballina, Australia

Perhaps Miro isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, however the way his art is organised and articulated is exceptional. The building was purpose designed and built, the multimedia audio guide the best I have had the pleasure of listening to and learning from, the views from the Terrace over Barcelona spectacular, the staff friendly and even the coffee shop was tops. There were additional temporary exhibitions on sound and silence as art, and an interactive art area. I spent a most enjoyable rainy day and came away with a greater appreciation of Miro’s paintings, sculptures, philosophies, life and times.

5. Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Massimo alle Terme

Largo di Villa Peretti 2 Museo Nazionale Romano, 00185 Rome Italy +39 06 480201 [email protected] http://archeoroma.beniculturali.it
Excellent
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Good
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Satisfactory
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4.5 based on 2,342 reviews

Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Massimo alle Terme

Palazzo Massimo alle Terme was built between 1883 and 1887 by the architect Camillo Pistrucci in a sober neo-Renaissance style. He was born as a Jesuit college and remained so until 1960. In 1981 it was acquired by the Italian State and became one of the four National Roman Museum places. The collections are distributed in the four floors of the building according to a chronological and thematic criterion: the ground floor, the first and second floors are dedicated to the ancient art section; the basement houses the numismatic and goldsmith sections.

Reviewed By SPSS_11 - Melbourne, Australia

The Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Massimo is just one of the sites of the Museo Nazionale Romano. You can buy a great value combination ticket that allows you to visit the other sites (the visits need to occur within a certain timeframe that I can't remember off the top of my head - their website will tel you). The Palazzo Massimo site houses sculpture, mosaics and frescos including the frescos from the garden room of the Villa of Livia and the Boxer at Rest sculpture. The museum is located almost directly opposite the Roma Termini train station, with one of their other sites (Baths of Diocletian) located within a 2 minute walk. There is a small cafe onsite which does light lunches, coffee etc. The audioguide is well worth hiring as some of the signage can be a bit sparse.

6. Centrale Montemartini

Via Ostiense 106, 00154 Rome Italy +39 06 0608 [email protected] http://www.centralemontemartini.org/
Excellent
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4.5 based on 680 reviews

Centrale Montemartini

The history if the new exhibition space for the Musei Capitolini in the former Giovanni Montemartini Thermoelectric Centre, an extraordinary example of industrial archaeology converted into a museum, began in 1997 with the transfer of hundreds of sculptures to the new location during the restructuring works carried out across much of the Capitoline complex. In an atmospheric game of contrasts, the old machinery of electricity production became the backdrop for masterpieces of ancient sculpture and precious goods found in the excavations of the late nineteenth century and the 1930s. The display reconstructs some of the great monumental complexes and illustrates the development of the ancient city from the Republican era to the late imperial age.

Reviewed By serenagrimaldi

It's a wonderful ex-industrial space filled with lots of lovely ancient Roman stuff!, The sculptures themselves make this worth visiting. I thank Mary Beard for highlighting this on one of her great programmes about Rome, I would never have heard of it otherwise. Easy to find on th Via Ostiense, lots of busses and a tram go there, or you can walk up from Ostiense metro about 10 mins, or Garbatella metro a bit quicker.

7. Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Altemps

Piazza di Sant'Apollinare, 46 accanto Piazza Navona, 00186 Rome Italy +39 06 684851 [email protected] http://www.museonazionaleromano.beniculturali.it
Excellent
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4.5 based on 486 reviews

Museo Nazionale Romano - Palazzo Altemps

The Museum of Palazzo Altemps houses absolute masterpieces of ancient sculpture belonging to famous and valuable noble collections received in state ownership. The installation aims to integrate - in a harmonious combination - the marbles in the decorative context of the rooms, having in mind and proposing solutions adopted in the arrangement of antique collections. The visit, on two floors, reveals a succession of decorated rooms, a maze of stairs and corridors leading to the discovery of the ancient works of art.

Reviewed By JonathonGreen

Housed in a splendid 15th century palazzi.Houses the best of rome's classical sculptures.Many pieces from Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi's collection.Houses the amazing Trono Ludovisi,a marble sculpture of Athrodite.Has a grand central courtyard and frescoed rooms.Also has a good Egyptian collection.

8. Musei Capitolini

Piazza del Campidoglio 1, 00186 Rome Italy +39 06 0608 [email protected] http://www.museicapitolini.org/
Excellent
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Satisfactory
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4.5 based on 2,757 reviews

Musei Capitolini

The creation of the Capitoline Museums has been traced back to 1471, when Pope Sixtus IV donated a group of bronze statues of great symbolic value to the People of Rome. The collections are closely linked to the city of Rome, and most of the exhibits come from the city itself.

Reviewed By GreenThumb331 - San Fernando, Philippines

It is surprising that the Capitolini Museum is not at the top list of one of the most popular things to do on the tripadvisor list. It should be at least in the top 20. We bought a Roma pass in order to enter this museum. The pass includes the Capitolini Museum as one of the options for entrance access. Once you enter, you will see the courtyard with ancient scultures most notably the Head of the colossal statue of Constantine I. The second floor of the Palazzo dei Conservatori is occupied by the Conservator's Apartment, housing such famous works as the bronze she-wolf nursing Romulus and Remus, which has become the emblem of Rome. The Conservator's Apartment is distinguished by elaborate interior decorations, including frescoes, stuccos, tapestries, and carved ceilings and doors. The third floor of the Palazzo dei Conservatori houses the Capitoline Art Gallery which houses the museums' painting and applied art galleries The Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius is the stand out attraction inside the Capitoline Museum. It is made of bronze and stands 4.24 m (13.9 ft) tall. Although the emperor is mounted, it exhibits many similarities to standing statues of Augustus. The one now standing in the open air of the Piazza del Campidoglio is a replica made in 1981 when the original was taken down for restoration.

9. Museo Nazionale di Castel Sant'Angelo

Lungotevere Castello 50, 00193 Rome Italy +39 06 681 9111 [email protected] https://www.facebook.com/MuseoCastelSantAngelo/
Excellent
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Satisfactory
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4.5 based on 14,236 reviews

Museo Nazionale di Castel Sant'Angelo

The Museum is divided into four sections, the history of Castel Sant'Angelo is illustrated by vintage prints, scenic views and interesting reconstructions ideals of the monument, as suggested by the imagination of artists and architects of the Renaissance, from its construction until the nineteenth century, in a path that highlights the intense and ongoing.

Reviewed By ClaraBqwerty

A great attraction to visit with kids. A beautiful castle with lots of rooms to visit and a magnificent view of Rome from the top. We went early and there wasn't much of a queue but it was a lot longer by the time we left. It has a lovely cafe near the top with what must be some of the best views in Rome. If you have young kids you need to keep an eye on them as there are a lot of gaps and small spaces on the walkways that they would be able to squeeze through if you're not alert. It keeps you on your toes. In the gardens behind the castle is one of the few playgrounds in Rome which was great for the kids to burn off some energy.

10. Museum of Cycladic Art

4 Neofytou Douka str., Athens 106 74 Greece +30 21 0722 8321 [email protected] http://www.cycladic.gr/en
Excellent
74%
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4.5 based on 1,189 reviews

Museum of Cycladic Art

A dynamic cultural institution in the centre of Athens, the Museum of Cycladic Art focuses on promoting the ancient cultures of the Aegean and Cyprus, with particular emphasis on Cycladic art of the third millennium BC. The Museum’s permanent collections include 3000 Cycladic, ancient Greek, and ancient Cypriot artefacts, witnesses to the cultures that flourished in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean from the fourth millennium BC to approximately the sixth century AD. The Museum of Cycladic Art’s temporary exhibitions focus on archaeology and modern and contemporary art with the aim to familiarize the public with important twentieth and twenty-first century artists and to explore the relations between ancient cultures and modern art. Salvador Dali, Pablo Picasso, Thomas Struth, Louise Bourgeois, Sarah Lucas, Ugo Rondinone, Jannis Kounellis, Mario Merz, Ai Weiwei, and Cy Twombly are among the artists hosted.

Reviewed By Tiffanymd - Salida, United States

Special exhibit was amazing. Permanent collection also informative and inspiring. I especially liked the Cycladic floor.

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