Tag Archives: Art Museum

The Musee Granet

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Tuesday, 09-July-2024


The two main attractions of Aix en Provence were the Méjanes library, and the Musee Granet.

The library was just a “walk up and check it out” situation, so we visited it first, after finding suitable parking… but the Musee, well, we had a feeling it may be a bit more of an adventure. We found some food, steeled ourselves, and charged inward to glorious art!



There was a lot of art.

Three floors of art, if I recall correctly, complete with a cool sub-basement that held (as is tradition) my favorite pieces in the museum. Not the most famous, or the weirdest, but definitely my favorites.

It was lovely; the main gallery was primarily religious, which isn’t quite my jam, but it was definitely interesting walking through and reading about all the details – Everything was purely in French, so I’ll include my translation-photos along for clarification. Of interesting note – one of the paintings, from 1661, is actually the first French portrait of a hunter! Kind of neat, showing how the vocation evolved over time.

Ohh also there was a sculpture of a guy without skin, from a doctor’s office in 1853. So… that’s a thing I’ve seen, now.



We perused, walked, explored, and enjoyed. We were able to make our way pretty much completely through the museum before getting saturated, too, which was a nice change of pace for me… by the time we were getting hungry, we’d finished up and were ready to head back to Cassis for some lovely dinner by the lapping waves.

The Vienna art history museum – Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien

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Sunday, 30-June-2024


After adventure and excitement, I finished my quest for the Art History museum in Vienna.

I’m going to be using the term “opulent” a lot in my blog posts about Vienna, I can tell. But really, there’s no better term to use to describe this museum… it was, simply put, opulent. In every sense of the word. I mean, Vienna is already full of beautiful architecture and art everywhere I looked and walked – how could the museum of art history not step that up a few levels?


I walked in, gawked at my surroundings for a few minutes, then tracked down the cafe – it was the early afternoon, after all, and I’d been exploring around the city in the heat of the day for a few hours at that point. I needed some food, quite a bit of water, and a coffee. Thankfully, I found all three without any difficulty, and a short wait in line later I was sitting and staring at the glorious paintings and marble surrounding me.

It was interesting – I mentioned in my “Exploring Vienna” post that I felt a connection to my Grandfather in Cafe Central, since he’d likely gone there at least once with his parents… Well, the Art History museum had a similar feeling for me. It had been founded in 1891, and although I doubt the cafe was quite that old I still felt confident that, at one point or another, my Grandfather had been roughly where I was now. Knowing his own love for the Museum of Fine Art in Boston, probably multiple times.

Seeing the room around me, it helped me understand where he had been coming from in his life. He’d grown up in Vienna, likely seeing the absolute opulence and majesty as the norm. Then, to see Vienna devolve into Nazism and hate so quickly, only to have to flee to England and the United States… It was interesting, trying to set myself into that mindset and to see how that would have affected me.



I kept those thoughts in mind as I finished my meal and traversed the museum.

From Egypt to Rome, into the treasures of the Hapsburgs and onward into stunning paintings and relics from throughout the city’s history. There was one exhibit on The Fugger’s family that I didn’t quite understand, but aside from that the museum was absolutely glorious – a lesson in beauty and regality. I even found a whole segment hidden on the top floor on Cartoons! Though… not cartoons that you or I would recognize as such, instead being massive tapestries depicting specific events and battles of the Hapsburg Dynasty.

I wandered, perused, and enjoyed the grandeur surrounding me. I appreciated the air conditioning, finished my explorations, and braced myself for the heat of the early evening on my walk home.

National Gallery Prague – Národní galerie Praha

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Wednesday, 26-June-2024


It started, as many excellent things do, with a snack.

I’d hiked / walked my way to the art museum from my apartment, through various squares, parks, and shops and other interesting spots, to finally arrive at the Museum of Art in Prague. I was a bit warm, a bit hungry, and could do with a cup of coffee… so I splashed some water on my face, got a slice of banana bread, a cup of coffee, and a table to sit at. I relaxed, cooled down, and got myself ready to soak in a lovely spot of art.


There was a lot of art to take in.

I mean… a lot, a lot. Instead of being organized purely by date, or artist, the paintings were organized into a few archetypes: “Man”, “World”, “Ideas”. There were also two other galleries – one for post World War art, and one for sculptures. It was an interesting curation choice, and definitely one that I enjoyed. Though, unsurprisingly, “World” was pretty cleanly my favorite… so you’ll see most of my photos coming from that gallery.

I walked, I explored, and I appreciated. I took breaks, I continued, and I absolutely enjoyed.