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Posted

For those into pottery, the Nezu museum in Tokyo and the Gulbenkian in Lisbon have wonderful Asian ceramics collection.

 

The Asian Art Museum in San Francisco should be also in my list.

 

I not much of a museum visitor but I found the Holocaust Memorial in DC very moving

 

No one could take the tour and not have tears when finished

 

I cried visiting Yad Vashem.

 

Posted (edited)

My favorite is The Detroit Institute Of Arts

 

One of the best in the USA.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detroit_Institute_of_Arts

 

Others that I’ve seen over the years are some of the Smithsonian Museums (National Gallery, Air and Space, American History), the Holocaust Museum, Henry Ford Museum/Greenfield Village, and the Museum of Science and Industry. I bought a membership to the Art Institute in Chicago a few years go, but just haven’t gotten there yet.

 

edit. Don’t know if it’s a museum per se, but the Arizona Memorial on Oahu is a must see.

Edited by bashful
Posted

traveled Europe in my mid-30's following an itinerary put together by friends, the top two museums during that trip was Van Gogh museum in Amsterdam, the experience was dramatically transformed with the audio guide/tour and Uffizi in Florence, (though I lost count after the thousandth Madonna con bambino)... but as I've aged I find myself returning again and again to the British Museum.

Loved the Van Gogh museum as well! I'll admit I was 20 years old when I visited Amsterdam during study abroad and a friend told my friends and I that some of the paintings may a make more sense if we had a beer or two before going to the museum and he was right! Nowadays when I go to an art museum I prefer to drink a glass of wine or beer before going.

Posted (edited)

Second, the Uffizi Museum in Florence, with Leonardo and Michelangelo at their best in Italian Renaissance Art.

 

Also the Borgese Gallery in Rome for the same glorious period in art, especially Raphael.

 

Prado in Madrid is one of my first museum, worth the wait

Edited by WilliamM
Posted

Second, the Uffizi Museum in Florence, with Leonardo and Michelangelo at their best in Italian Renaissance Art.

 

Also the Borgese Gallery in Rome for the same glorious period in art, especially Raphael.

I remember visiting the Borghese villa. One would have to email/call for reservations. There was no online method to do so. Was truly a gem! Yes, the Uffizzi is fantastic - amazing Botticelli’s on the second floor.

Posted

I love many of the traditional museums previously mentioned, plus also the Boston Museum of Science, and the Van Gough museum in Amsterdam.

 

But I would be remiss on this site to not mention the national Leather Archives and Museum, located in Chicago.

In addiotion to great erotic artwork, it holds a vast history of gay and gay leather life. There is a library where you can see old gay magazines from decades ago, containing classified ads of escorts and masseurs from the days before the internet. Perhaps you might even find some ads of guys who frequent this site!

 

Regards

Peter

Posted

Loved the Van Gogh museum

 

Don't know if this was mentioned previously, but the new Van Gogh Immersive Exhibit (in venues other than museums) looks interesting. I can't find a link that will paste, but google "Van Gogh Immersive Exhibit"

Posted

I get claustrophobia in crowded museums. 50 years ago bankers got Election Day off while few others did. I would spend a lonely hours wandering thru The Met or Guggenheim. Then we last that day to MLK day and museums are all closed on Mondays. Alas.

 

If you can escape from the bars and baths of Bangkok for a bit, I commend the Jim Thompson House Museum. He, of the silk business, collected Thai buildings, ceramics, furniture, etc that he assembled into a magnificent estate in the middle of the city. It’s now museum and oasis of tranquility in that bustling city.

 

 

The Jim Thompson House is awesome, its on a canal and i had a wonderful few hours riding the public ferry boats up and down the canal , 19 baht for the full length

Posted

My favs are as follows

* The Frick Collection NYC

*The Guggenheim. NYC

* Rodin. Paris

*Guggenheim Venice Italy

 

I love what the English call stately homes

 

Blenheim Palace. UK

Howard Castle UK

 

Some Fabulous Royal Residences

 

Buckingham Palace

Windsor Castle

Hampton Court Palace

Balmoral Castle

Sandringham House

 

Versailles

Posted (edited)

I love a good niche museum. Those small highly focused on an off the wall topic ones. My favorite one is the Mütter Museum in Philly. It's a museum of medical oddities. Kind of morbid but fascinating

 

Ditto. The Sir John Soane museum in London is great. The Cloisters. Get a Paris Museum pass and map it out. A number of them are only worth 10-30 minutes but are interesting and included in the cost. There’s a nice house museum in Amsterdam, name forgotten to me. Haven’t yet made it to the penis museum in Reykjavik, but people says it’s worth a trip. There’s also a small whale museum that has a bunch of fiberglass whales that sounded corny but I had 30 minutes to kill and had fun. This one isn’t exactly small, but the Hermitage outpost in Amsterdam is very nice. Many University campuses have very nice and not well known museums as well. Sometimes a corporate headquarters will have a small but interesting museum, always free.

Edited by spider
Posted

Ditto. The Sir John Sloane museum in London is great. The Cloisters. Get a Paris Museum pass and map it out. A number of them are only worth 10-30 minutes but are interesting and included in the cost. There’s a nice house museum in Amsterdam, name forgotten to me. Haven’t yet made it to the penis museum in Reykjavik, but people says it’s worth a trip. There’s also a small whale museum that has a bunch of fiberglass whales that sounded corny but I had 30 minutes to kill and had fun. This one isn’t exactly small, but the Hermitage outpost in Amsterdam is very nice. Many University campuses have very nice and not well known museums as well. Sometimes a corporate headquarters will have a small but interesting museum, always free.

It's Sir John Soane. (A friend of mine was the director many years ago)

Posted

It's Sir John Soane. (A friend of mine was the director many years ago)

 

Yeah. That pesky L sneaks in, but at least I got the E right! Fixed. Thanks.

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