It's not everyday that you see a historic church used as a museum space for modern art, fashion, celebrities, or culture and history of religious groups other than Christianity. Not to mention also host royal weddings and music recitals. With De Nieuwe Kerk (The New Church), you find all these in one spot.
Construction began in 1408 during medieval times and the church was finished and consecrated a year later, dedicated to Saint Catherine. The current impressive wooden-beamed roof was result of a devastating fire in 1645 after which several key components of today's building were added: the organ, pulpit, brass choir screen, and elaborate funerary monuments such as the one to Admiral Michiel de Ruyter. 1959 to 1980 was the most recent major restoration with a national foundation created and stepping in once the Protestant church that originally owned the building became unable to maintain upkeep.
As a modern event space, they host a variety of happenings--most commonly museum exhibitions, as was the case when I visited. "Mokum - the Biography of Jewish Amsterdam" took visitors thru the history of the Jewish community--from immigration, shared cultural customs and traditions and gradual advancements in society, to the subversive Nazi movement and ultimately occupation of Amsterdam during WWII, the strained persistence to survive and the rebuilding that happened afterwards. There were a lot of didactic placards with info on what was being displayed, in both Dutch and English throughout the exhibit.
Tickets are €22.50 for adults, discounted tickets available for children (Youth 12-17 years €15.00, under 12 free), students €15, certain groups and pass holders are free. Tickets include a free audio tour. I used the "i amsterdam" pass which involved a quick scan of the QR code at the ticket counter. Recommend about 45 minutes to go thru the tour, maybe an extra 20-30 minutes to check out the church building itself.
For more info:
https://www.nieuwekerk.nl/en/ read more