老澳门六合彩开奖记录

Prado Museum facade and Cervantes statue in Madrid, Spain
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Museo del Prado

Top choice in Madrid


老澳门六合彩开奖记录's Ultimate Guide

Explore insider tips, fascinating history and surprising secrets to make the most of your experience.

The Prado is one of the world鈥檚 most dazzling art museums.

From the medieval to early modern, its vast collection of European works is housed in a grand building on the Paseo del Prado. Smack in the heart of Madrid鈥檚 "Golden Triangle of Art", an area that is now a World Heritage site, it attracts crowds of visitors from around the world with works by big draw artists including Rubens, El Greco, Bruegel, Durer, Raphael, Caravaggio and Rembrandt. But it鈥檚 the Spanish masters that really steal the show with 痴别濒谩锄辩耻别锄鈥檚 enigmatic Las Meninas and Goya鈥檚 chilling Black Paintings heralding the dawn of modern art.

To make the most of the museum give yourself a full day and plan ahead. While some ruin their appetites by trying to cram everything in, you鈥檙e far more likely to come away satisfied by carefully selecting a few items from the visual feast on offer. Pick up a floor plan when you enter and choose a few paintings from the list of highlights. This will leave you plenty of time to make your own surprising discoveries along the way among lesser-known works.

People sit on a central bench while others walk around a gallery lined with large paintings
Plan your visit to the Prado with this guide 漏 Joseph Sohm / Shutterstock

Insider tip

The rooms surrounding more famous works tend to be crowded. So if you fancy a breather, journey back in time to room 51C on the ground floor where you鈥檒l find frescos taken from two 12th-century hermitages. Of particular interest are the Mozarabe paintings from the Hermitage of San Baudelio, which give a rare glimpse into the artistic language of Christians living under Muslim rule during the time of Al-脕ndalus.

How much time you need in the Prado: three itineraries

If you have 30 minutes

痴别濒谩锄辩耻别锄鈥檚 Las Meninas is one of the Prado鈥檚 most iconic paintings. In a central oval room on the first floor, the Spanish masterpiece takes pride of place, attracting crowds of visitors. A visual conundrum, its unusual composition is part of its appeal. On the face of it, it鈥檚 a royal portrait of the five-year-old Infanta Margarita. Standing in the bottom center, she鈥檚 a luminous figure surrounded by attendants. A closer inspection reveals that the artist has placed himself in the shadows to the left of the little girl, gazing out at the viewer with a shrewd, rather arrogant look on his face.

Reflected in a mirror above Margarita鈥檚 head are the two tiny figures of King Felipe IV and Queen Mariana of Austria. Is Vel谩zquez supposed to be painting them? If so, why would he choose to diminish the monarch in this way? With his canvas facing away from us, Vel谩zquez isn鈥檛 giving anything away, allowing the viewer to draw their own conclusions.

Surrounding this picture are not only other works by Vel谩zquez but also paintings by El Greco, Rubens, Titian and Jusepe de Ribera. The latter鈥檚 illuminated portraits of saints spotlighted against dark backgrounds demonstrate why he was considered, along with Vel谩zquez, to be one of the greatest painters of the 17th century.聽

People walk through a crowded art gallery
The Prado is quietest first thing in the morning 漏 trabantos / Shutterstock

If you have 90 minutes

After you鈥檝e taken in the first floor, head downstairs to check out Hieronymus Bosch鈥檚 Garden of Earthy Delights. Painted somewhere between 1490 and 1500, the triptych nevertheless seems startlingly modern. Packed with bizarre details, there are quite a lot of sexual references going on in the central panel, as naked figures gad about among oversized fruit and giant animals. Some have theorized that Bosch was advocating a return to the innocent sexual abandon of Eden on the lefthand panel. However, given the popularity of the painting at the time, this is highly unlikely. More probable is that it鈥檚 a morality tale with the sinners getting their gruesome just deserts in hell on the righthand panel.聽

The Garden of Earthly Delights was part of the collection of Felipe II, a king with an excellent eye for art. En route to Bosch鈥檚 masterpiece, you can check out a fantastic painting of the man himself. Felipe commissioned this portrait from Italian painter Sofonisba Anguissola, a woman whose incredible talent allowed her to defy the stereotypes of her time. In the vicinity, you鈥檒l find other stunning paintings including Pieter Bruegel鈥檚 Triumph of Death (room 55A), D眉rer鈥檚 Adam and Eve (room 55B) and Van der Weyden鈥檚 The Descent from the Cross (room 058).

If you have half a day

Arguably the Prado has three major attractions: 痴别濒谩锄辩耻别锄鈥檚 Las Meninas, Bosch鈥檚 Garden of Earthly Delights, and Goya鈥檚 Black Paintings (room 67). What they all have in common is that they remain relevant to the modern eye. For Bosch it鈥檚 the bizarre subject matter, for Vel谩zquez it鈥檚 the innovative composition and for Goya鈥檚 late paintings, it鈥檚 the style that makes a complete break with the pretty blue skies and strawberry-cheeked subjects he鈥檇 painted before.

After years spent weathering various regime changes as a court painter, the practically deaf Goya washed up on the wrong side of town living an isolated life in the Quinta del Sordo. Here, he finally stopped pleasing patrons and released years of pent-up psychological trauma onto the walls of the building. Witness to atrocities during the French invasion of Spain, Goya was clearly extremely disturbed by this point.聽

There are many other earlier paintings by Goya in the collection, but none quite so startling as Saturn Eating his Son and Drowning Dog. As they can be a bit bleak to contemplate, drop in on your way out to see some smashing work by the master of shimmering light, Joaqu铆n Sorolla.

History of the Prado

Originally slated to become a science museum, construction on the main building of the Prado began in 1785. However, these plans were upset when Napoleon鈥檚 invading army camped out in the half-finished structure in 1808. After King Fernando VII was restored to the throne he used the Edificio Villanueva to house the enormous royal collection, opening its doors to the public on November 10, 1819.聽聽

Tickets and other practicalities聽

While tickets for the Prado can be bought on site, to avoid lines, it鈥檚 best to buy tickets online from the official . Entry to the museum and special exhibitions costs 鈧15. An hour-and-a-half tour of the museum by a member of staff costs an additional 鈧10 and an audio guide 鈧5. The Prado Guide app available from the iStore and Google Play is ostensibly free, however, to get any use out of it, you have to make in-store purchases.聽

The museum is always crowded, so either get there first thing in the morning at 10am or when there鈥檚 a slight lunchtime lull around 3pm. You can get in for free in the evenings from 6pm to 8pm (5pm to 7pm on Sundays) but queues are huge and you could be waiting quite some time.


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