Tag: “Museum Of Art”

121 results found.

  1. At Claude Monet museum, Giverny, France

    The house Claude Monet lived and worked is a place art lovers often choose as an art tourism destination. And certainly want to buy something to remember the trip.

  2. A Telephoto Lens in the Vatican Museum

    It is impossible to absorb all the art when walls, floor, and ceiling overflow, but it helps to focus on one element at a time.

  3. Danish Design Center

    Moved to its current location on HC Andersens Boulevard in January 2000, the DDC is a relatively compact museum dedicated contemporary Danish design. The rotating exhibits span industrial design, graphic design, and artistic displays, all set in a stylish building in central Copenhagen.

  4. Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego

    THE JOAN & IRWIN JACOBS BUILDING AND THE DAVID C. COPLEY BUILDING
    The expanded MCASD Downtown provides San Diego and the binational region with a new dynamic cultural venue, allowing the Museum to serve many more visitors with contemporary art exhibitions and public programs for adults as well as children.

  5. Royal Museums of Fine Arts, Brussels

    The Royal Museums of Fine Arts in Brussels, Belgium is a collection of museums featuring a wide range of art from 15th century through to the modern day.

  6. The Palatine Hill in Rome Exemplifies that Rome Is the Eternal City

    Location, location, location. If you wanted to be neighbors with the rich and famous in ancient Rome, you should have built on the Palatine Hill.

  7. Louvre, Paris

  8. MoMA. Vincent van Gogh. The Starry Night. Saint Remy.

    The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Vincent van Gogh.

  9. Bus-celona

    A mini sightseeing trip to the spacious, lighthearted and magical city of Barcelona on the Mediterranean.

  10. Guggenheim Museum, NY

    This 'small from the outside-big from the inside Museum', designed by Frank Lloyd Wright contains beautiful art from as well contemporary artists as the old masters.

    Due to the circular architecture the exhibited art is seen in a continuous flow walking down or up the 'spiral'.