The Museum of Art in Philadelphia is one of
the country's largest museums. Its collection of some 300,000 works of
art covers diverse artistic areas.

The works on display include photographs, paintings, tapestry, carpets,
sculpture, armory, ceramics and furniture. Some of the two hundred
galleries even include complete historic sites such as a buddhist
temple. Its paintings collection includes works from renowned artists
like Picasso, Van Gogh, Rubens and Renoir.
The Museum is located on a hill at the end of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, providing a perfect vista for this wide boulevard.
The Museum is located on a hill at the end of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, providing a perfect vista for this wide boulevard.

Inside the Museum
Centennial Exposition
The origins of the museum go back to the Centennial Exposition of 1876.
It was held at Fairmount Park, where a permanent exposition hall was
built for the exposition's art gallery. The building, known as Memorial Hall
was designed by Hermann Schwarzmann. It was built between 1874 and 1876
in the popular Beaux-Arts style. The glass-domed building is still one
of the most beautiful in Philadelphia.
A New Building
The museum's collection expanded rapidly and by the end of the nineteenth
century
Memorial Hall had become too small. In 1907 the decision was made to
build a new museum on a hill known as Faire Mount, at the end of the
recently completed Benjamin Franklin Parkway.
The building, designed by Horace Trumbauer, Julian Abele, Clark
Zantzinger and Charles Borie, was inspired by Greek temples. An imposing
flight of stairs leads to an open court bordered by three connected
neoclassical temples.

Medieval armor
Construction
Construction started in 1916, but not enough money had been raised to complete the whole building, so the
wings
were completed first. These opened to the public in 1926. Two years
later, with additional funding provided by the city and donations, the
central temple was finally built.

Perelman Building
Ruth and Raymond G. Perelman Building
In 2007 the Museum of Art opened an expansion in the nearby Perelman
building, a historical Art Deco building constructed in 1927 as the
Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company Building. The building was
designed by the same firm that designed the main Museum of Art building.
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Location
2600 Benjamin Franklin Parkway