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Maritime museum featuring the Manila–Acapulco galleon trade: GSIS Museo ng Sining: Macapagal Boulevard, Financial Center, Pasay: Filipino arts. Iglesia ni Cristo Museum: Punta, Santa Ana, Manila: Museum of the history and culture of the Iglesia ni Cristo. Also originally the location of the first local congregation of the Christian denomination.
The Metropolitan Museum of Manila, also branded as the M, is a non-profit art museum located in Bonifacio Global City (BGC) in Taguig, that exhibits local and international contemporary art. [1] It bills itself as the Philippines' premier museum for modern and contemporary visual arts by local and international artists.
The National Museum of Fine Arts (Filipino: Pambansang Museo ng Sining [1] [2]), formerly known as the National Art Gallery, is an art museum in Manila, Philippines. It is located on Padre Burgos Avenue across from the National Museum of Anthropology in the eastern side of Rizal Park .
The free entrance policy became permanent in 2016. [11] In 2019, President Rodrigo Duterte changed the agency's name from "National Museum" to "National Museum of the Philippines" through Republic Act No. 11333. [12] In 2025, the museum extended its opening hours to include all seven days of the week, having been previously closed on Mondays. [13]
The old building that hosted the old Ayala Museum was demolished which met some criticism from heritage conservationists. [6] The museum moved to a new six-story building made from granite, steel and glass, [6] which was designed by Leandro V. Locsin Partners, led by Leandro Y. Locsin Jr., the son of the architect that designed the old Ayala ...
It is located in the Agrifina Circle, Rizal Park, Manila adjacent to the National Museum of Fine Arts building. Built c. 1916–1918 from a neoclassical design by Canadian-American architect Ralph Harrington Doane when he was consulting architect to the Philippine government, [ 1 ] the building formerly housed the Department of Finance . [ 2 ]
Art In Island is housed within a two-storey building covering 3,800 square metres (41,000 sq ft). [3] Marketed as the "biggest 3D museum in Asia", exhibits are primarily murals which rely on optical illusions, which causes the two-dimensional works to be perceived as three-dimensional.
Construction of the museum commenced in 2009 at the site of the former San Ignacio Church and Convent. A Round Table discussion was held on June 1, 2017, at the Bayleaf Hotel in Intramuros, regarding the reconstruction of San Ignacio Church and Convent. Among those who joined are experts on museology, art and architecture history, and heritage ...