Not bad museum, just one day in Istanbul, you can go shopping here, encounter Istanbul's 100-year photo exhibition, it is more interesting, you can understand the history, a good place to kill time
Istanbul Museum of Modern Art
Posted: Dec 18, 2019
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冰原之狼
5/5Outstanding
Original Text
The Istanbul Museum of Modern Art is a very famous art place in Istanbul. The quality of the exhibits is very high. It is also very praised along the Bosporus Strait. But the biggest drawback is that the tickets are expensive and the Istanbul Museum Pass cannot be used. I recommend that you do not miss the museum souvenir shop after visiting, you will have a harvest yo
2
Posted: Sep 18, 2017
珞韦
5/5Outstanding
Original Text
Really feel good, especially to catch up with a retrospective exhibition of Turkish contemporary artists inside. What surprised me was that the interior facilities and pavilion concept of this art museum in Turkey had been integrated with the Southwest Nordic countries. The cloakroom service is no different from the Louvre and Prado Art Museum. The collection of works actually has sculptures of contemporary international masters, which makes me a little surprised! ! ! ! ! The art works in the museum are introduced with detailed text, various installations, images, new media art, please like ~! ! !
0
Posted: Feb 13, 2015
纹801527
5/5Outstanding
Original Text
The environment is good, the environment is good, the environment is good.
0
Posted: Sep 2, 2023
恍然如梦Tim
4/5Excellent
Original Text
Istanbul, Turkey, a modern metropolis, is magnificent and grand, and the museum is very good. .
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Posted: Feb 12, 2023
门子乀
5/5Outstanding
Original Text
In addition to some middle school students under the guidance of teachers, there are not many people inside, and compared with the art exhibition that is always full of people in China, cats prefer to quietly enjoy these art treasures up close. The permanent collection of the museum consists of three parts: metering in the Anatolian civilization (Anatolian Weights and Measures), Kutaia tiles and ceramics (Kütahya Tiles and Ceramics), and Oriental art, including more than 300 paintings by European artists inspired by the Ottoman Empire from the 17th to the early 19th centuries.