The Best Museums in Rome
Vatican Museums
Art museum · Campo Marzio
"There is a staggering amount of artwork on display here. It is said that if you stood at each piece for just one minute, it would take you four years to see everything. Created by Pope Julius II in the early 16th century, the museums have expanded over the past 500 years to their current size of more than 12 acres! Highlights include the Borgia Apartments, the Raphael Rooms, the Gallery of Maps, and of course, the sublime Sistine Chapel."
Villa Borghese
Park · Pinciano
"Villa Borghese Encompassing early 200 acres of rolling parkland, Villa Borghese is Rome's verdant heart and everyone's favorite place for an afternoon walk. The vast gardens are criss-crossed with picturesque paths, where visitors can meander past ancient statues and fountains, sit by a lake or caffè, and take in a film at one of two cinemas. For culture vultures, there is a Shakespearean Globe Theatrewith a robust summer schedule, a historic puppet theater, and several world-renowned museums including Galleria Borghese with its enviable collection of Bernini sculptures and Caravaggio paintings. Younger kids enjoy playgrounds, electric train rides, and a kids museum, while childrenof all ages can get active with skate, bike, and paddleboat rentals."
MAXXI - National Museum of 21st Century Art
Museum · Flaminio
"Maxxi Museum, Rome Maxxi, Rome’s first major contemporary art museum, cost €150 million and took renowned architect Zaha Hadid 10 years to complete. The result—a vast, bold space with exhibits on architecture and art—proves that modern Rome can produce masterpieces, too. Via Guido Reni 4A, 39/06-3996-7350, fondazionemaxxi.it . This appeared in the May/June 2011 issue."
Palazzo Massimo alle Terme
Archaeological museum · San Paolo
"If one single space encapsulates the Roman Empire, it would be Palazzo Massimo, Rome ’s multilevel museum housing one of Italy ’s richest collections of antiquities. The entire history of Rome , from the rise of the Republic to its imperial transition to its fall, is told through sculpture, mosaic, frescoes (watercolor paintings), and coins. Get to know generations of emperors by checking out their marble busts, then hang out in the 1st-century Villa of Livia dining room of Caesar Augustus's wife. Note: Palazzo Massimo is part of the National Museum circuit, which means ticket holders can also access three more national museums (Terme di Diocleziano, Palazzo Altemps, and the Crypta Balbi) over a three-day period."
Capitoline Museums
History museum · San Paolo
"A world class sculpture collection beside the Forum The Capitoline Museums house a collection of ancient sculptures in a pair of buildings designed by Michelangelo in the mid-16th century. The architecture on its own is stunning, but add to that brilliant frescoes and museum halls decked out with bronze and marble statuary depicting gods, emperors, and even exotic animals, and you've got one of the most magnificent museum collections in the world. Don't miss the colossal statue of Constantine, now in pieces, on the ground floor near the entrance. To get from one museum building to the other you will have to pass through the Tabularium (the ancient vital statistics building), from which there are spectacular views over the Roman Forum."
National Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art
Museum · Pinciano
"La Galleria Nazionale For 120 years, Italy’s national gallery of modern and contemporary art, La Galleria Nazionale, maintained a relatively low profile in its gorgeous neoclassical palace on the edge of Villa Borghese—but no longer. The 2016 renovations reintroduced the collection, which covers 5,000-plus Italian works from the late 1700s to yesterday. Blockbuster Italian and international artists represented include Canova, Clemente, Modigliani, Beecroft, Penone, Calder, Kandinsky, Duchamp, Pollock, and Twombly."
MURo
Corporate office
"In 2010, street artist Davide Diavù rebooted Rome’s sleepy Quadraro neighborhood by launching MURo, an outdoor urban art museum where artists from around the world come to adorn large structures with even larger murals. The result is a vibrant arts district covered in neon works by geniuses like Alice Pasquini, Camilla Falsini, Gary Baseman, Jim Avignon, and Diavù himself. Take the English walking tour to learn about the works' (often political) hidden meanings."