Musee d’Orsay, France
Standing on the
Left Bank of the Seine, this venerable Paris museum was opened in 1986
in a former Beaux-Arts railway station and hotel. The layout uses its
previous incarnation to full effect – galleries cluster around the grand
nave and light streams in through its sweeping glass roof. Conceived to
bridge the gap between the collections of the Louvre Museum and the
Pompidou Centre, it focuses on late 19th and early 20th Century art and
houses the world’s largest collection of impressionist and
post-impressionist paintings. (Credit: Daniella Nowitz/Corbis)
Guggenheim, Spain
During a period of
city-wide regeneration in Bilbao in the late 1980s, the idea for the
museum came about through a collaboration between Basque authorities and
the Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation. US architect Frank Gehry won the
design commission and the museum opened its doors in October 1997. The
impressive building stands on the edge of the Nervión River in the old
industrial heart of of the city, its glass and limestone structure clad
in waves of titanium. It was an immediate sensation; among its fans, the
architect Philip Johnson hailed it “the greatest building of our time”.
(Credit: Art Kowalsky / Alamy Stock Photo)
Oscar Niemeyer Museum, Brazil
The museum was
opened in 2002-3 and nicknamed ‘the eye’ as it resembles a giant human
eye perched on a yellow pillar. The legendary Brazilian architect who
designed it (and gave it his name) was a key figure in the modern
movement; he was 95 when the building was completed. A 2,000 sq-ft
museum space houses international art along with many of Niemeyer’s own
works. (Credit: Chris Schmid Photography / Alamy Stock Photo)
British Museum, London
The architect
Robert Smirke designed the core of the museum, which opened in 1852, in
the neo-Classical style. The grand south entrance, with its impressive
pediment and pillars, drew inspiration from ancient Greece. In 2000,
Foster and Partners created a new Great Court, which, with its
spectacular glass roof, transformed the museum’s inner courtyard into
the largest covered space in Europe. (Credit: David Pearson / Alamy
Stock Photo)
Royal Ontario Museum, Canada
This museum of
natural history, art and culture is Canada’s largest, with over six
million items in its collection. In addition to its original and 20th
Century buildings, Studio Daniel Libeskind’s new entrance design, which
opened as the Michael Lee-Chin Crystal in 2007, was described by the
museum as “a distinctive new symbol for Toronto for the 21st Century”.
The complex prismatic structure of glass and aluminium on a steel frame
has its detractors though – in 2009 it made number 8 on a list of ‘the world’s ugliest buildings’. (Credit: Bill Brooks / Alamy Stock Photo)
Museo Soumaya, Mexico City
The private
cultural institution was established in 1994 and ranges across two sites
– Plaza Loreto and the Plaza Carso in Mexico City. The latter, which
opened in 2011, was designed by Mexican architect Fernando Romero,
engineered with Ove Arup and Frank Gehry. A 151ft (46m) structure clad
in 16,000 hexagonal aluminium tiles, the six-floor museum contains work
predominantly from Mexico and Europe, including the largest collection
of Rodin’s works outside of France. (Credit: Frederic Soltan/Corbis)
Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russia
One of the largest
and oldest museums in the world, the Hermitage was opened in 1764 by
Empress Catherine the Great and houses over three million pieces of art
and cultural artefacts. The sprawling state museum complex consists of a
number of buildings, including the grand green-and-white Winter Palace,
the former home of the Russian Tsars. The colossal palace was designed
in the main by Francesco Bartolomeo Rastrelli in an elaborate Baroque
style. (Credit: Konstantin Kalishko / Alamy Stock Photo)
Museum of Islamic Art, Doha
Opening in the
Qatari capital in 2008, this museum was designed by the Pritzker
Prize-winning architect IM Pei. At the age of 91, Pei travelled
throughout the Arab world for six months collecting inspiration for the
project. The towering five-storey limestone structure perches on
reclaimed land with views across the Doha waterfront and its two wings
are connected by a large central courtyard. It houses a collection of
Islamic art from over 1,400 years. (Credit: Iain Masterton / Alamy Stock
Photo)
Vatican Museums, Italy
The Vatican City’s
museums were opened by Pope Julius II in the 16th Century; its complex
contains 52 galleries and is one of the largest museums in the world.
The museum’s collection of religious sculpture and painting includes
works by Raphael, Titian and Caravaggio. Its rooms include the Gallery
of Maps and the Gallery of Tapestries and its very last sala is the
magnificent Sistine Chapel, its walls decorated with works by artists
including Perugino and Botticelli and the vaulted ceiling painted by
Michelangelo. (Credit: Exotica / Alamy Stock Photo)
National Museum of Art, Osaka
After the original
1970s building was demolished, a new structure designed by César Pelli
opened in 2004. The majority of the museum – including its art
collections – is subterranean, with only the entrance lobby above
ground. For maximum wow factor, Pelli’s studio created a towering
intertwining glass-and-steel entrance designed to resemble reeds along a
riverbank or stalks of bamboo. (Credit: Robert Harding / Alamy Stock
Photo)
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