Your private Madrid experience
Most visitors see the Thyssen-Bornemisza after it opens at 10 a.m., sharing its compact galleries with hundreds of others. This experience begins an hour earlier, when the museum belongs entirely to your group.
That matters here more than at most museums. The Thyssen is unusually intimate. Formerly a private...
Most visitors see the Thyssen-Bornemisza after it opens at 10 a.m., sharing its compact galleries with hundreds of others. This experience begins an hour earlier, when the museum belongs entirely to your group.
That matters here more than at most museums. The Thyssen is unusually intimate. Formerly a private collection, it’s housed inside an 18th-century palace, natural light filtering through skylights on the warm, salmon-pink walls chosen personally by Baroness Carmen Thyssen. It was built not to overwhelm but to let you stand close to the art. And in the quiet of an empty museum, it works exactly as intended. Your guide is a museum docent who specializes in the Thyssen collection and who knows why the Barons Thyssen-Bornemisza treasured what the Spanish state museums didn’t: the Impressionists, the Fauvists, the German Expressionists, the 19th-century American landscapes not found in other European museums. They’ll walk you chronologically from top floor to ground, connecting the gold-leaf altarpieces of medieval Italy to the Flemish realism of Van Eyck, through the Impressionist light of Degas and Monet, and into the experimental art of Picasso and Dalí. Ninety minutes is enough here. The collection is deep but not sprawling, and with a guide who knows when to explain and when to let the art speak for itself first, you'll leave with the rare feeling of having truly understood a museum — not just walked through one.