Do you enjoy visiting museums?

asp3

Senior Member
Do you enjoy visiting museums? How often do you go to museums and when do you go to museums? Do you have any favorite museums? Are there museums you keep returning to again and again? Are there any special exhibits that you have enjoyed?

I love going to museums. I do it as often as I can. I like many different types of museums and almost always try to visit at least one museum when travelling.

I go to the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles several times each year because they are open for free on first Fridays. I like to get to the San Francisco MOMA (Museum of Modern Art) a couple of times a year. Sometimes if there are a few good exhibits coming up we become members so we can go several times otherwise it's a bit expensive.

I loved the Smithsonian museums but have only been to them once. I also love the Met in NYC, the Tate museums in London which I've visited multiple times and the Louvre but have only been there once.

One of my favorite recent exhibits was Play It Loud at the Met in NYC. It was a display of instruments and outfits from rock musicians. It was a wonderful show.

Another interesting exhibit I went to was one of Brazilian art at the Guggenheim where they had painted the famous spiral interior completely black.

Museums and exhibits that have had the most emotional impact on me were the Museum of Propaganda in Dubrovnik and an exhibit on the holocaust at the Imperial War Museum in London.
 

Have been to the museums in D.C. with my kids on field trips years ago....maybe two or three times....The Smithsonian, Natural History, and the Holocaust museum brought me to tears throughout the whole three floors of touring....also took in all the local town museums of Indian artifacts and the Belle Boyd history nearby....no interest in repeating these tours again.
 
We went with my daughter and family to the Smithsonian last year,my second trip. I love it. So much to see. The kids were particularly interested in the new dinosaur exhibit. I wanted to see Julia Childs kitchen which was so interesting.
On our trip across country we visited the Donner Memorial State Park and museum. I was always interested in the Donner party and what they went through. This museum is small but very informative.
Two that are on my bucket list is the Eastern State Penitentiary in PA where you can view Al Copones cell. Being from New Jersey I love gangster stuff.
Also nearby is the Mutter museum of medical history. I've been wanting to see that for a long time but my family doesn't share my enthusiasm. For some reason seeing pickled body parts doesn't excite them. I may have to bribe my daughter to take me there.
 

I discovered the Ashmolean museum in Oxford, UK, last year, and it lived up to its great reputation.

The great museums in London can't be faulted either, the British museum obviously, and the natural history museum, (Oxford has one as well, and I found it well worth a visit).
 
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I volunteered in a museum for 7 years .
The building was erected in 1878. as a school , The school remained an active and important centre for the community for ninety years and closed in 1968. The building has 15 large rooms
The museum is dedicated to the Cornish family’s who immigrated to Australia to work in the copper mines. The area was very harsh and dry with no fresh water ,trenches were dug by hand in solid limestone country to the sea 5 km away for water to use in the mines

Last year they started doing ghost tours of the museum due to many sightings especially in the war room where they have allot of war items including Japanese swords / guns / stretchers used to carry wounded / dead from war zones / parachutes / uniforms and the list go’s on
Allot who enter that room ( which in the Center of the huge building) comment how cold it is even in the heat of our summers that can get up to 47c as for my self when I was was on duty I had to walk through the very dark room to turn on the lights for some reason the hairs on-my arms would stand up.

The ghost tours picked up someone sitting on a chair in the room and the chair was seen to move
by them ,the tours were conducted at night and the museum is out of town in the old copper mining area where there are no street lights.
As for myself I’m Mmm about the ghost sightings.

The whole area is owned and run by the National trust ..there was some talk about it being placed on the world heritage list but I can’t say that’s been achieved at this stage, I must ask when I speak
to the head person next time I see him.

I gave the volunteering away after a scare ,as you work alone while on duty there and no close contact other than a heritage ( homemade ) sweet shop on the other side of the road If you run into
any trouble your on your own, I had a mentally unstable man come in one day and refuse to leave
he wanted to be let in for nothing ,so he blocked my escape by standing in the one and only Useable exit / entrance I wasn’t harmed it was more creepy than harmful

747ADA0D-9FDA-4B73-B4B5-14FC98273610.jpeg
 
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I ADORE museums!

Grew up in Chicago with the amazing Museum of Science & Industry - crawled through a German submarine; looked up at a NIKE missile; fell in love forever with Colleen Moore's incomparable Cinderella's Fairy Tale Castle (I have both out-of-print photo books as well as Ms. Moore's wonderful autobiography which talks about Hollywood's Silent Screen era as well as what amazing engineering - and valuable jewels! - went into her dollhouse).

My mother once walked us completely through the Field Museum of Natural History - all four floors of it, from the minute they opened until the final close. Even at that I'm sure we missed a few corners. I loved their old-fashioned dioramas.

A very wealthy man bought AND MOVED a small castle from Scotland to Hyde Park on the South Side of Chicago. He had an eclectic collection of European, Asian, and Middle Eastern antiques, displayed on the ground floor and Great Hall. You could visit for free on certain days - I spent many hours there after school. He had a mummy case that opened once an hour (with a mummy inside); quite a scary sight for a 6 yr old! In the Great Hall, there were three life-sized statues of galloping horses and knights, wearing armor and holding lances - a truly stunning sight. Very sadly, when he died, his family sold off the collection in pieces and closed the castle to make it a private residence.

The San Francisco Bay Area doesn't have notable "big" museums, although there are many remarkable smaller ones. The Berkeley Art Museum has some wonderful shows, and I will always remember their display of the "Executive Order 9066" exhibit, which created a sensation in the Japanese-American community. For many families it was the first time parents and grandparents discussed with the Sansei generation (of which I'm one) how they felt about the relocation camps.

A unique SF experience is the SF Exploratorium, a museum of science, technology, and arts combined into what could be called a "scientific funhouse". It's full of interactive exhibits for adults and kids of all ages. Located downtown on SF Bay, it's central to public transit and should not be missed.

The de Young Museum and the Legion of Honor in SF are officially associated with one another (for years they were competitors). The outstanding Louis Comfort Tiffany show back in the 1970's was beautifully mounted. It was amazing to get a really close-up front-and-back look at his massive "Magnolia Window" panels.

De Young generally gets the "big" shows, traveling exhibits like King Tut etc. The Legion has a lesser quality European painting, but can boast the prestigious Achenbach Foundation of drawings and photographs, including rare Rembrandt drawings.

The Asian Arts Museum is based on the gift of Avery Brundage (former head of the Olympics), who gave his complete collection to the de Young. Added to what they already had, it was finally broken off into its own separate museum, taking over the building that formerly housed the SF Public Library. There are paintings, sculpture, furniture, textiles, and arms/armor. Most importantly, Brundage owned one of the finest private jade carving collections extant.

I'm not a fan of modern art but I did love the original Mario Botta architecture of the SFMOMA. It had the kind of design proportions and angle views one sees in classic Japanese design.

Los Angeles has the "big" $$$$$ museums. The Getty Museum, for example; its endowment is so big, they charge for parking, not admission. It's an authentic reproduction of a classic Roman villa. There are now two campuses, as they went on a massive buying spree in the '80's and '90's. They are renowned for their photography collection, considered one of the finest in the world.

LA's Natural History Museum shouldn't be missed. It's well designed and not so large, so it can be easily managed as a day trip. The unique La Brea Tar Pits Museum is another, altho I confess the smell of tar gives me a headache! Art museums include the Norton Simon, the Broad, and the Contemporary Art Museum, as well as the Hammer, the Autry American West, California African-American, and the gracious Huntington Library with its magnificent grounds.

For car lovers Los Angeles has the Petersen Automotive Museum, one of the stranger pieces of architecture you'll ever see. Its collection is small, however; only 300 cars although many are one-of-a-kind.

The BEST auto museum ever was the original Harrah's Auto Museum in Reno, NV. Bill Harrah, of Harrah Casinos, owned over 1400 cars that spanned the very beginning of car making, all the way up to the latest 1970's models. They were housed in five warehouses and every single one of them was in running condition - even the very oldest, an 1880-something carriage with a tiny engine mounted on the front deck. There is still a small collection left, but the rare Bughatti Royale Type R, the massive Duesenbergs, as well as the stunning 1929 Isotta Fraschini coupe with mohair upholstery I fell in love with - all were auctioned off by Holiday Inn Corp. after Harrah died. Sigh. I visited five times and am only sorry I didn't make it back for a sixth visit before the collection was broken up.

Our visit to Boston was short so we only had time for the Boston Fine Arts Museum - lovely! - and the Isabella Gardner Museum - loved the building architecture, loathed the collections.

Alas, the wonderful Higgins Armory Museum was sold to the Worcester Art Museum in 2013. We saw it in the original Higgins Armory building, which was much superior for display purposes (Worcester, Massachusetts).

CT has a wonderful museum we can heartily recommend:
- Mashantucket Pequot Museum & Research Center, located inside the casino. My spouse and I are NOT interested much in American Indian history or arts, but we were fascinated by the exhibits here. They are interactive, life-sized, and extremely well-done, with interesting videos. We gave ourselves 90 minutes at the end of the day, but afterwards truly regretted we hadn't planned on at least a full two hours, maybe even a little more.

Although not strictly a museum, we can also recommend visiting the unique Lan Su Chinese Gardens in Portland, OR. Artisans from Mainland China came over with their hand tools and created the buildings, the exquisite walkways, pools, gardens and stone sculpture area. Much is made of Portland's Japanese Garden, which is lovely but frankly, those exist in quite a few cities. But the classic Chinese garden is rarely found in the Western Hemisphere. It is a stunning place!
 
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I prefer to look at great homes and estates that have been preserved as opposed to a traditional museum collection.
Yes, Aunt Bea. I have been to the Hill-stead in Farmington CT more times than I can remember. Wonderful old rambling family country mansion. You would love it!

Whistler, Mary Cassatt, Degas, Monet, Manet and others I forgot...

I've been to The Met and The Modern in NYC; The Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale New Haven; The Bushnell in Hartford, Old Mystik Seaport and Old Sturbridge Village. That one on the Cape in Provincetown.

Also the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art that had Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party on loan. I got chills looking at it. Its huge.

My days of standing all day in museums are over. My feet hurt!

https://www.hillstead.org/
 
In any country not my own, their museums are my first point of interest. The British Museum and the Imperial War Museum are good for a few years' worth of viewing. Haven't been to the Museum of London, yet. Edinburgh has a super Science and Technology Museum.
New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museum of Modern Art are good for a few years of viewing too. Oh yeah, the Museum of Natural History in NYC is pretty cool as well.
I hope my traveling days aren't over.....there are a lot of museums I haven't visited.
 
Growing up in the suburbs of New York City, I was fortunate to have been able to visit the Museum of Natural History a number of times as a child, which awakened in me a sense of awe, wonder, and curiosity. In addition to a great collection of dinosaur fossils, the museum even boasts a meteorite collection, a planetarium, and so much more! Museums are like candy for the mind... 😻
 
In general yes, I do enjoy visiting museums. I've been to many museums in many countries, but some of the most interesting have been small privately run ones.
It's hard to pick out the best, but one of the most memorable ones was "In Flanders Fields" museum in Ypres, Belgium.

The worst one I have been to is the new V&A museum in Dundee. The building is quite spectacular if you like architectural ego trips, but inside is little more than a huge empty space with less exhibits than most people's attics!

In contrast, Dundee has some excellent museums. Beside the V&A is the RRS Discovery, the ship that took Captain Scott and his crew to the Antarctic . The ship and adjacent museum were well worth the visit.
 
I love museums too! I have been to many over my lifetime. One that stands out is The John & Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, FL. There was their circus museum also on the grounds as well as their beautiful home. I lived in St. Petersburg at the time so went there more than a few times. I love art museums and it was very beautiful and I spent a lot of time there. You can go through their home also.

I have been to NYC quite a bit (not far from here and my first husband was from the Bronx and LI) and to Washington, D.C. and went to every museum I found. I went to Rome also on a vacation and spent two weeks doing a lot of walking through all the museums there. Sadly, I cannot do any walking now.

Last summer Sonny and I went to the Northeast Classic Car Museum, which is right here in Norwich, NY where I live. We rode our mobility chairs to the museum from my apartment and spent the whole day there. It was a great way to spend a day and he is a certified motorhead.
 
We go all the time. Small town museums are often very good and tell great stories about local history. A lot of small towns have one.

We were most recently at the Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in OK City, for the third time. We practically had the place to ourselves. It's one of the best museums I've ever been in, in terms of quality of exhibits and breadth of subjects.

Ft. Worth has great museums, and they're mostly free. Another Texas museum that's fabulous is the Museum of the War in the Pacific in Fredericksburg. It's incredibly detailed and if you're a WWII buff, you could spend days there. Why little Fredericksburg? It's the birthplace of Admiral Nimitz.

I am hoping to go to Arkansas this fall to see the leaves, but also to visit Crystal Bridges, a fabulous art museum in little Bentonville, Arkansas. It was initiated by one of Sam Walton's (Walmart) daughters, and contains only American art. It is amazing. We were there 2 years ago. And the Walmart museum there is a hoot! I loved Bentonville.
 
Yeah, I'm a museum rat. Since I've become disabled I haven't been to one. In D.C., you get "museumed" out. There are just way too many wonderful museums. I love being next to some man made thing that's 10,000 years old. And I can't get enough of ancient Egyptian artifacts. How can you NOT be in awe standing in front of Abraham Lincoln's stove pipe hat in a museum.
 
I go to the top-rated museums in cities I visit. I rarely check out the smaller, specialty museums, unless they are showcasing exhibits I'm interested in. Too many museums to name, on my life list.
 
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Love them. My favorite is St Louis Art Museum They have a highly rated permanent collection and it's not packed like museums in NYC and DC. If you want to emotionally connect with art, it's nearly impossible to do that in crowds. That's why I also seek out smaller collections ...preferable in situ in historic homes... when I travel to larger cities.
 
I do. When my son was young, I took him over to the Museum of Natural History in New York City. It's huge. By the time we got to the planetarium part, I got a splitting headache so we had to leave. We never got to go back. I also took him to Washington DC where they have of themed museums in the same location. He loved the Air & Space museum. We took a mini vacation to Philadelphia and went to the African American museum. Most recently I met my online BFF in Washington DC. She and her beau picked me up from the hotel and we went to the African American Heritage museum They live in California and she set up meet ups in DC and Virginia, one for the purpose of meeting her new found brother and cousins she had recently found out about. We only got to see one floor of the museum because of a storm that was forecast to hit within a couple of hours. My hotel was close by but theirs was about a 40 minute drive.
 
Yes! I love museums, and as a grad student was given intimate access to the Met of Art, NYC; Frick Collection, NYC; Ashmolean in Oxford. I've always loved museums, even Ripley's Believe It or Not. When I grew up, Museums in NYC had Free Admission, and it was my parents who instilled my love for them.
 
Lethe200, we were in Chicago a few years ago before Dave retired, and went to the art museum there. It had a display of miniatures in the basement that just blew us away. It was the Thorne collection, and had everything, in miniature, from a gothic cathedral to a Frank Lloyd Wright room to a French chalet. It was wonderful. https://www.artic.edu/departments/PC-15/thorne-miniature-rooms

Did you know there was a photo book published of the Thorne rooms? It's pretty cheap used; I own it and it's lovely:
Miniature Rooms: The Thorne Rooms at the Art Institute of Chicago
 
Yes! I love museums, and as a grad student was given intimate access to the Met of Art, NYC; Frick Collection, NYC; Ashmolean in Oxford. I've always loved museums, even Ripley's Believe It or Not. When I grew up, Museums in NYC had Free Admission, and it was my parents who instilled my love for them.

Ugh. I need to stay away from mirrors today since I'm pea green with envy and drooling!!!

What were you studying? Art history, a branch of the fine arts, social sciences incorporating the arts or some other equally wonderful thing?
 
Living in and around NYC, I've been to all the major museums there several times. I loved the Smithsonian in D.C. and the Louvre in Paris. But, a boyfriend of mine took me to a small museum near Princeton, NJ as they were featuring a favorite artist of his. Well, just as soon as we passed the entrance, there was a display of the mechanisms of how a grandfather clock was made and this mesmerized me. He couldn't get over the fact that something like this would fascinate me. If he were around me today, he'd be amazed at how much I watch, How It's Made on T.V. Love stuff like that.
 


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