This museum, a true institution with its magnificent collection on ancient Egypt, is considered as the American Louvre.
You could devote an entire week to visiting this immense museum. The main entrance, opposite 82nd Street, is crowned by grand staircases. You can also use the basement entrance opposite 81st Street. The Met's slogan says it all: 5,000 years of Art! This New York institution, the local equivalent of our Louvre, was founded in 1870 by a group of eminent citizens of finance, industry and the arts. It was then a bizarre little building, glimpsed in Scorsese's film The Age of Innocence. The museum occupies the equivalent of four blocks. It is said that it would take a lifetime to discover the nearly 2 million works of art housed in the Met's 18 departments over 600 km², and another lifetime to absorb their significance in space and time: the museum brings together art objects from 5,000 years of the most diverse civilizations (China, Far East, Egypt, Assyria, Greece, Rome, Africa, Oceania, Europe, the Islamic world, the Americas), from prehistory to the present day. The Metropolitan accumulated its treasures for 90 years before building the galleries in which to display them. A visit lasting just a few hours, if you wanted to see it all (assuming it were possible), would be a marathon bordering on the absurd. However, the Metropolitan Museum, like the rest of America, is devoid of works from the Pre-Raphaelite school! Another difficulty is that, given the sheer number of works in the museum's holdings, some collections can only be viewed on a rotating schedule. The Met brings together five major collections: Egyptian antiquities, primitive arts, medieval art, European and American painting. More than just an exhibition, it offers a truly immersive experience. The museum itself, for example, has partially reconstructed a medieval church, the interior of a bedroom in the time of Louis XIV or Louis XVI, or a Pompeii villa. In addition to the five major collections, there are entire wings devoted to modern art, musical instruments, arms and armor, Islamic art, ancient Near Eastern art, Greek and Roman art (the second largest collection in the world after that of the Athens museums), European sculpture, decorative arts and more. From Egyptian statuary to Byzantine jewelry, from Florentine and Venetian paintings and porcelain to the primitive treasures assembled in the Michael C. Rockefeller wing (opened after Nelson Rockefeller's son disappeared in New Guinea in 1961), from 18th- and 19th-century American artists to the impressive collection of French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist painters, English, Flemish, Dutch, Spanish, Italian... You could devote your entire stay to visiting this fortress embedded in Central Park. The museum is so large that you'll never have the feeling of an overflow of tourists (except when you have to queue at the entrance, of course). The halls are vast and easy to navigate.Not-to-be-missed works include Auguste Rodin's Les Bourgeois de Calais in the sculpture wing, Jackson Pollock's famous painting Rythme d'automne, Vincent Van Gogh's Self-portrait in a Straw Hat, Claude Monet's La Grenouillère, Egyptian funerary portraits, the Sphinx of Hatshepsut, the Byzantine galleries, Self-portrait in 1660 by Rembrandt, Diptych by Van Eyck, Portrait de la princesse de Broglie by Ingres, the Seated Couple sculpture in the Arts of Africa section, Gertrude Stein by Picasso, Cyprès by Van Gogh, the Impressionist collection... The highlight of the ancient Egyptian collection is the gigantic Temple of Dendur (or Temple of Isis), a true Egyptian temple commissioned by the Emperor Augustus and built around 15 BC, not far from the town of Aswan. In 1965, Egypt donated the Nubian temple to the United States, and the 800-ton structure was shipped to America, before being installed at the Met in 1978.
Knowing all this, you'll have to make a very subjective choice before rushing headlong into the museum. It's best to choose on the basis of whether you prefer Japanese weapons or Impressionist painters. It's impossible to see everything, unless you want to devote your entire stay to the museum. Please note that the French audio commentary could not be more disappointing, and focuses only on a very small number of works, so we advise against it. Before you go out, be sure to take a look in the museum's art stores, which offer magnificent reproductions at affordable prices. And don't forget the Cantor Roof Garden Bar on the fifth-floor panoramic terrace, with its beautiful views of Central Park and New York (open from May to late autumn, weather permitting, from 11am to 4.15pm Monday to Thursday and Sunday, and Fridays and Saturdays from 11am to 8.30pm), where contemporary art is also on display in fine weather. For 2024, a sprawling sculptural installation by Kosovar artist Petrit Halilaj has found its place here.
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Members' reviews on METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
The ratings and reviews below reflect the subjective opinions of members and not the opinion of The Little Witty.
exhibitions and they was nice i did not get to explore them all that will take time tho i will come back to see more in the future and i enjoy listening to the people playing the vivlion on fridays such as treat to the eyes.