MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS COLLECTIONS

1. Art of Asia

For Asian art connoisseurs, the museum offers a dizzying overview of Japan’s multiple artistic forms. In fact, the MFA holds the largest collection of ancient Japanese art outside of Japan. In addition to the tranquil Temple Room, with its centuries-old Buddhist statues, visitors should look out for the beautiful hanging scrolls and woodblock prints, with their magical, dramatic landscapes and spirited renderings of everyday life. Kurasawa fans, meanwhile, will be enthralled by the menacing samurai weaponry. Additionally, the Art of Asia collection contains exquisite objects from 2,000 years of Chinese, Indian, and Southeast Asian history, including sensuous ivory figurines, pictorial carpets, and vibrant watercolors.

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Japan “Golden Age” (1781–1801) print

2. Textile and Fashion Arts

Rotating displays highlight pictorial quilts, period fashions, fine Persian rugs, and pre-colonial Andean weavings. Particularly interesting are the textiles and costumes from the Elizabethan and Stuart periods – an unprecedented 1943 donation from the private collection of Elizabeth Day McCormick.

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Stuart woman’s doublet, dated from 1610–15

3. Classical Art

The remarkable Classical Art Collection has a hoard of gold bracelets, glass, mosaic bowls, and stately marble busts. One of the earliest pieces is a c.1500 BC gold axe, inscribed with symbols from a still-undeciphered Cretan language.

4. Art of the Americas

The MFA’s Art of the Americas wing, designed by Norman Foster, opened in 2010. The wing features pieces dating from pre-Columbian times, through to the third quarter of the 20th century, and showcases about 5,000 works produced in North, Central, and South America. The museum has profited from generous benefactors over the years and the collection holds the world’s finest ensemble of colonial New England furniture, rare 17th-century American portraiture, a superb display of American silver, and paintings by the country’s own “Old” Masters, including Copley, Stuart, Cole, Sargent, Cassat, Homer, and many others.

5. Art of Egypt, Nubia, and the Ancient Near East

This collection is a treasure trove of millennia-old Egyptian sarcophagi, tomb finds, and Nubian jewelry and objects from everyday life. The assemblage of Egyptian funerary pieces, including beautifully crafted jewelry and ceramic urns, is quite awe-inspiring. Ancient Near Eastern objects, with their bold iconography and rich materials, illustrate why the region is known as the Cradle of Civilization.

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Egyptian mummy mask (AD 1–50)

6. European Art to 1900

From 12th-century tempera baptism paintings to Claude Monet’s Haystacks, the MFA’s European collection is staggeringly diverse. Painstakingly transferred medieval stained-glass windows, beautifully illuminated bibles, and delicate French tapestries are displayed alongside works by Old Masters: Titian, El Greco, Rembrandt, and Rubens. A superlative Impressionist and Post-Impressionist collection boasts masterpieces from the likes of Renoir, Degas, Cézanne, and Van Gogh, plus the finest group of Monet’s works outside of Paris.

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La Berceuse (1889) by Van Gogh

7. Contemporary Art

Given Boston’s affinity for the traditional, you might be surprised by this world-class collection of contemporary and late 20th-century art. It includes works by the painter and photographer Chuck Close and the Abstract Expressionist artist Jackson Pollock, which are on display in the Art of the Americas wing. New Media is also well represented here.

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Tibetan conch shell trumpet

8. Musical Instruments

Priceless 17th-century guitars, ornately inlaid pianos, and even a mouth organ are on view to visitors of the MFA. Among the more distinctive pieces is a c.1796 English grand piano – the earliest extant example of a piano with a six-octave range – and a 1680 French guitar by the Voboam workshop.

9. Art of Africa and Oceania

Pre-colonial artifacts from these collections include Melanese canoe ornaments, dramatic Congolese bird sculptures and African funerary art. The most popular African display is the powerful-looking 19th- and 20th-century wooden masks.

10. “Please be Seated!” Installations

View (and sit on) one of the country’s most comprehensive collections of American contemporary furniture. The museum encourages visitors to admire and sit on these furniture pieces. Take a break and have a seat on fine American handiwork by designers such as Maloof, Castle, and Eames.

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