
|
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts1379-1380 Sherbrooke West - 514-285-1600 The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal) is the grande dame of the Canadian museum world. Founded in 1860, the original pavilion, shown at right - now known as the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion - dates from 1912, and the Jean-Noêl Desmarais pavilion, facing it across Sherbrooke St., a Moshe Safdie design, from 1991. The pavilions are connected by an underground passage. The museum has a large collection of decorative and ethnographic objects, 19th-century paintings, and Canadian paintings, prints and drawings, only a small fraction of which can be displayed at a time. It also hosts major travelling shows. Café and boutique on the premises. Admission to the permanent displays is free. |
![]() |
|||||||
Musée d'art contemporain185 Ste-Catherine West - 514-847-6626 Montreal's modern art museum, the Musée d'art contemporain, once housed in Cité du Havre, acquired its permanent home by Place des Arts at Jeanne-Mance and Ste-Catherine in 1992. Specializing in works dating from 1940 onwards, the museum hosts shows in all media used by contemporary artists. Admission is $8; Wednesday evenings are free. |
|
![]() |
|||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
Additional historical museums in Montreal include:
The McCord Museum of Canadian History,
690 Sherbrooke West - 514-398-7100 |
|||||||||
Text and photos: Kate McDonnell