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    Alte Pinakothek

    Old Pinacotheca

    4.4 (67 reviews)
    Closed 10:00 am - 8:00 pm

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    The masterpiece of the museum ... A Peter Paul Rubens
    Jimi L.

    WOW !!! what an amazing museum ... 1 one room they have 9 Rembrandts ... HOLY cow .. not even in Amsterdam do they have that !!! 3 Raphaels in another room ... and the Highlight of the Museum is the Peter Paul Rubens ... an entire gallery of them ... about 40 of them .... I have been stunned !!! Oh and did I mention a Da Vinci painting also !!!! Took us about 2 hours to go thru the entire museum ... and we didn't rush it ... Just breathtaking ... One tip ... instead of climbing the endless amount of stairs as you enter .... go to your right to the lift to the shop .. you will thank me later !

    Long hallway with so many big galleries.
    Aprille C.

    This is a huge museum. I bought the combo package which got us into the Alte Pinakothek plus the Pinakothek Moderne(& one more that we didn't get to). In the morning we had the place mostly to ourselves. But as we finished, more people arrived. It was nice to see so many Rubens, plus more.

    Robyn P.

    The Alte Pinakothek  is one of the oldest art galleries in the world, and was completed in 1836. I was interested to discover that "Alte" means "Old" in German, and the Museum name refers to the time period covered by the collection from the 14th -18th century. The process to visit the museum was easy, as tickets can be purchased on line and public transportation readily available. I want to acknowledge "Franz" , who greeted us at the door, as the friendliest museum employee we have encountered in Europe! The building layout is pretty straightforward with elevator access as well. Bathrooms are clean and free and lockers available with a Euro coin deposit ( returned when items retrieved). There is a cafe on sight, serving dessert and coffee ( even though the sign also lists sandwiches, the employee told us they don't have them- with no further explanation). Audio Guides cost 5 Euros. All exhibits have explanations in English. There were a tremendous amount of museum personnel in exhibit rooms, regularly cautioning people not to get too close to the artwork. They have some FAMOUS paintings at this museum, including: Self-Portrait with Fur-trimmed Robe, by Albrecht Dürer, The Rape of Daughter of Leucippus by Peter Paul Rubens, a self portrait by Rembrandt, and Beggar Boys Eating Grapes and Melon by Bartolome Estebanand Murillo. The museum also has one of the Van Gogh Sunflower paintings " One Vase with Twelve Sunflowers". These are just a few examples. This museum is a great place to spend a few hours in Munich and a chance to see Italian, French, Dutch, Spanish and Germany old master paintings.

    Marshall G.

    This is a wonderful museum if your focus is German and Finnish and Dutch. In that world it is here.g

    Adrienne A.

    I loved this museum. I was bummed I wasn't able to see the entire collection due to the renovations, but so happy for what was available. I loved it, and was deeply moved. Gorgeous stairway, windows especially at the right time of day. I can't wait to go back once it's the renovations have been completed.

    Jang C.

    Alte Pinakotehek is one of the many art museums in Munich. The others are Neue and Der Moderne Pinakotek, Sammlung Schack, and Brandhorst. Alte, like the name implies, means "old". It mainly consists of paintings from 13th to 18th centuries. Since it is a German Art museums, there are plenty of German, Italian, Flemish, and Dutch paintings featured. This place isn't too big, but it will take a day to take in everything. I liked how the Pinakoteheken are divided into 3 periods. Each museum will probably take a day to see it all. I like this better than The Chicago or NY Met, since they are gigantic art museums, and you need multiple days to see everything. Instead, the Alte should take no more than 1 day (or 2 slow days) to get through. During Sundays, it's only 1 Euro to get in. On other days, it's 12 Euros. You get an audio guide. At first, it was confusing how to use the Audio guide, since not every piece has the audio guide. Under specific pieces, you will see an Speaker Icon and a number. Those are the ones you type in to listen to the audio guide. There are other numbers below the art pieces, but they're not for the audio guide. If they don't have the speaker icon next to it, they're just numbers. To get here via U-bahn, you should get out of the Odeonplatz or Universität station and walk. I think Universität is a bit closer. Anyways, it's not close to a U-bahn station.

    Peter Paul Rubens
    Chantel M.

    Sunday's are considered sacred in Germany and many places are closed, museums are one of the things open and they are cheap! It cost one euro to go to Old Pinacotheca, the lines get long considering the cost is so low. There are a lot of surrounding museums to visit after just across the way. The inside of the museum is beautiful, a lot of German, Finnish and Dutch works. I did feel like my every move was being watched while inside, that would be my only complaint. There are lockers located at the entrance and I probably should have placed my jacket there because I was constantly being told to hold it close to me in a ball. I saw the most incredible painting I have ever seen here, it was a piece of work by Peter Paul Rubens and it moved me in ways art has never done before. The moment I saw this painting I was in awe. I starred at this painting for 30 minutes, went and saw more work then circled back to spend more time admiring it. The detail, color, and emotion of the painting just blew me away. I loved all the collections they had of Rubens work, so many large scale paintings to admire. There is a copy of the Mona Lisa inside that was very cool to see. Pieces by Da Vinci and Rembrandt as well. I would highly recommend visiting if you have time for some historic museums!

    Beer ! Custom for the alte pinotek
    Adam C.

    Went on Sunday. Very hot day.€1 Admission.. What spectacular collection.. The museum was very crowded due to the being the last day of the caravaggio..exhibit .. I wish we had more time to visit more art museums

    The cake in the cafe inside the museum is delicious. All home made and reasonably priced
    Johanna S.

    This museum is currently under reconstruction, but still well worth a visit. What i liked -The worldclass paintings: A leonardo da vinci, some rembrandts and several rubens. - Looking at the leonardo without the crowds you would see in st petersburg, italy or the louvre. - museum is very walkable from centre of town - entrance to museum is very affordable

    Emeline V.

    I guess it must be me, and not the Pinakothek. I can't help but feel a bit disappointed. The building looks lovely and roomy from the outside, but is strangely awkward when inside. The stairs to go upstairs are tucked at the back of the building, hidden behind huge brick walls. Also, don't blink, you might miss the toilets, which are under the stairs (which I find so odd and cozy at the same time). As for the Exhibit, I was blinded from the get-go, Dutch art, aaaahhhhh how I LOVE Dutch and Flemish art. I was swimming in bliss throughout the first floor, but as I wanted to go upstairs, found myself confused, went to the other side of the building, and then visited the second floor non-chronologically. This would explain the confused looks all the security personel gave me! The second floor, as far as I'm concerned, is a bit messy. you have two halls which sometimes connect and sometimes don't. The main gallery is french and italien art, the side gallery is is still Dutch and Flemish works, with a bit of italian, but predating what you've just seen on the first floor. Mmmmm. Some great works are on display, a couple of famous Bouchers, and pastorals/fêtes galantes, a couple of Rembrands, including the famous and tiny self-portrait, and a whole lot of Rubens, which I happen not to like so much. Even tough their collection of Dutch art is huge, I found only one Saenredam, and a couple of Metsus, no Gerrit Dou!The greater part of the collection is made of renaissance works, mainly religious works, which get repetitive, very fast, at least in my opinion. I think I might just have been tired of weaving back and forth between the side and main galleries. I love that the audio guide is included in the (rather low) price, but very few of the works are covered, and not necessarily the most important or interesting ones. No mention of the Dutch commercial power? Protestantism? Class warfare in 18th century, or the Grand Tour? The commenters dwell in "old Art History", based on symbols, and feelings, which is infuriating to me! The Museum is, for lack of a better word "incomfortable": the title and author of the work are written on a sticker, stuck onto the work's frame. There is strickly no wall text what's so ever. I've only seen two "tablets" which were only in German, and only explained what tied this or that painting to the German context.The visitor is given no introduction to the time periods covered. I would also have liked a brief history of the Museum in itself. I know it was rebuilt, but when? How? The decor is pretty austere, and rather disconnected. Why is there a silk wallpaper in the side corridor for the Dutch works? Does it relate to the works, in what way? I'm not sure what to make of the Museum shop. I think you can observe a lot of cultural differences between Germany and North America just in that gift shop. What will strike you are: books. Just books. BOOOOOOOOOOOKSSS. I usually look forward to museum shops for the expensive knick-knacks and jewelry, stuff related to the various exhibitions and so forth, but the A.P doesn't have various exhibits, as much as one big heteroclitic one, so the books are about everything, and anything. The shop is basically an alley-way, which is, once again, uncomfortable.

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    Amazing, must see, do not miss it! Amazing collection, great presentation. Van Dyck & Rubens galore!

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    Great museum for a rainy day. The neue Pinakothek is closed so we walked across the street to this one. Overall a great experience.

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    Review Highlights - Alte Pinakothek

    As a visitor, it is important to note that Sunday is still sacred in Munich.

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    Deutsches Museum

    Deutsches Museum

    4.2(113 reviews)
    2.3 kmAu, Ludwigsvorstadt-Isarvorstadt

    One of the better ways to spend a day in Munich, especially with kids. The Deutsches Museum sits on…read morea small island in the Isar and covers pretty much every corner of science and technology, and what makes it stand out is how much of it you can actually touch and interact with: cranks to turn, experiments to run, buttons that do things. It's not just cases full of objects behind glass. Depending on your party and how they like these type of things, plan for at least half a day; the place is enormous and easy to get lost in, which is half the fun. The kids' sections held up well for the younger ones, and the aviation and engineering exhibits kept the adults just as occupied. You can bring in food and some of the areas allow food and drinks so bring your lunch and find a place in the halls to sit if you want to. Buy your ticket online before you go. The walk-up queue when we visited was long enough to lose a meaningful chunk of your day, and there's no reason to stand in it. Depending on which ticket type you get, you may need to stop at the information desk to convert to a paper ticket before entry, which nobody tells you upfront. Some visitors seemed to go straight through; we did not. Either way, sort that out before you walk to the entry gate or you'll end up backtracking.

    We spent a full five hours here yesterday and it was amazing. Most of our time went into the…read morechemistry, music, mathematics, and health sections--so much to learn, so little time. We arrived around 11 a.m., which worked out perfectly and gave us enough time to explore most of the exhibits. The cafeteria was extremely crowded with limited seating, probably because it's peak holiday season. The food was fine--typical cafeteria fare. Next time we're in Munich, I'd happily come back to see the exhibits we missed. My teenage kids even said this is the best museum they've ever visited, and they've been to many museums around the world. Definitely a memorable experience for all of us.

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    Deutsches Museum
    Deutsches Museum
    Deutsches Museum

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    Münchner Stadtmuseum

    Münchner Stadtmuseum

    4.2(32 reviews)
    1.4 kmAltstadt, Altstadt-Lehel

    This museum is so strange - it was free which is the only reason I'm giving two stars instead of…read moreone. But the whole time we were so confused on what the point of the museum was. The typically Munich exhibit made no sense and seemed a strange contrast to the Jewish exhibit across the plaza. And then after being there for an hour a docent yelled at us for our bag being too big so we just took it as a sign to leave. Overall I'd never recommend this museum

    After a disappointing visit to the Jewish Museum I went to Stadtmuseum which is across the…read morestreet(they have deals where I believe certain museums are 50% off if you show a receipt). I paid extra for the exhibit on art that the Nazis stole from Jews. Didn't pay for an audioguide as the English translations were pretty good in the sense that most displays did have translations. Mixed experience. To start let's be honest, you probably just came to see Nazi stuff (I know I did). The exhibit on Nazism in Munich was excellent. It was specific to Munich without essentially telling me why the Holocaust started, who the Nazis were, etc (basically what every standard museum on the topic discusses). I will give Germany credit that their city museums really do a good job at discussing that particular city's role in the worst, disgusting part of Germany's history. I read everything there. The exhibit on stolen on was fairly good as well.Part of it was a little dry, but toward the end of the exhibit, they gave bios of the Jewish families who had their art stolen and about their descendants (if any...). They also (this was sad to see them not actually discuss) didn't really talk about how the German government was making it very difficult for Jews to claim back art that was theirs or belonged to their family (similar to Woman in Gold which was in Austria...not much different). Something fascinating to know that this actual museum was a collaborator in Nazi Germany in the sense that they were on board with stealing art and worked alongside Nazis. The exhibit did not hide that. Locker room was clean and modern. Bathrooms were fairly clean as well. There were 2 gift shops. One was more like an antique shop, and the other had extremely overpriced fun souvenirs like dachshund notepads with them wearing lederhosen (came close to buying but couldn't see myself spending a lot of $ on a notepad lol...). The workers here were awful. I was told in an exhibit that didn't have a no photographs sign that I couldn't take photos so I said no problem and stopped. That guy (Indian guy I believe) kept following me throughout the exhibit as I was taking notes on my Ipad since photos were not allowed). I saw him later whisper to another worker something and sure enough they followed me a little bit too. When I was done at the museum, I went back to the lobby to check the time of my train on my phone. (Note they say that they have free WIFI but they don't have the password displayed so you do have to ask them for it). The woman working the register yelled at me no photos.THIS WAS IN THE LOBBY THERE WAS NOTHING TO BE DISPLAYED WHATSOEVER!!! The worst part is, I didn't take a photo as there was nothing to take a photo of. When she yelled at me I showed her that I was on the Bahn app. No apology....she just looked embarrassed. The Germans have a thing with photos...probably because they don't want evidence. In any event well worth a visit.

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    Alte Pinakothek - museums - Updated May 2026

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