Unusual museums where you can take pictures. Unusual museums of the world

Few people know, but there are more than 400 museums in Moscow. Most of them are private. There are far fewer state and their branches. According to these parameters, the “white stone” is ahead of the rest. In London there are more than 250, in St. Petersburg there are over 200 museums, in Paris there are just over 80, and in New York there are less than 50.

We have already written about the most famous and popular routes through Moscow museums earlier -. But in addition to the top museums, there are no less interesting ones - unusual and unusual ones, which Moscow guides very rarely mention.

So, 7 of the most unusual museums in Moscow that are worth visiting:

Museum of Optical Illusions

Museums don’t always just look, moving from one exhibit to another, and the new museum on Arbat is direct proof of this. It definitely won’t make you bored, because here you literally become part of the exhibition, and how exactly you complement it depends only on your imagination. On an area of ​​one thousand square meters, there are many paintings on a variety of topics: here are fairy-tale scenes, and very real interiors, stills from films, fantastic creatures... Your task is only to find the right position, becoming part of the canvas. And don’t forget to take your camera, because photography is where the illusion becomes real.

Address: Moscow, Maly Nikolopeskovsky lane, 4

Operating mode: daily from 11:30 to 23:30

Ticket price: 350 rubles.

Electromuseum

The Electromuseum is a unique and multifunctional gallery that opened its doors to visitors in 2014. The museum literally keeps up with the times, because its curators are convinced that the future lies in modern technologies and media, and the field of art is no exception. The museum hosts exhibitions of artists from all over the world working in art media format, music concerts, sound installations, lectures and seminars. Whether the future in art lies in new technologies or traditions, only time will tell, but now the Electromuseum is one of the most interesting places to visit.

Address: Moscow, st. Rostokinskaya, 1

Operating mode: Tuesday - Sunday from 11.00 to 20.00

Ticket price: 100 rubles, preferential - 50 rubles

E-Book Museum

As you might guess, this museum is one of the newest, since electronic books appeared relatively recently. The museum's exhibition is dedicated not only to the e-book, but to books in general. Here they present exhibits from ancient papyri to modern gadgets, and show a retrospective of the development of writing and books. But typewriters and the first computers are not everything. Visitors can watch films, such as a mid-20th-century French short that ironically predicts the advent of e-books. Here you can also familiarize yourself with and work with the latest readers and download e-books.

Address: Moscow, st. B. Cherkizovskaya, house 4, building 1

Operating mode: Monday - Friday from 11.00 to 22.00, Saturday - Sunday from 12.00 to 20.00

Ticket price: 150 rubles

Museum of the History of Chocolate and Cocoa

Where else, if not in museums, can you combine business with pleasure? Here you have both history and chocolate. The museum is very informative - here you can trace the history of chocolate from the very time humanity began to cultivate the cocoa tree, and before this product came to Europe and became firmly established in our everyday life. The hotel part of the museum is dedicated to wrapping for chocolate products, which is no less interesting. But the most amazing thing is the opportunity to see with your own eyes how chocolate is made, following each stage. And the most delicious thing is, of course, tasting different chocolate sweets straight from the assembly line.

Address: Moscow, st. Malaya Krasnoselskaya, 7

Operating mode: Monday - Saturday from 9.30 to 17.30

Ticket price: main exposition - 375 rubles, chocolate laboratory - 300 rubles

Museum "World of Coca-Cola"

Did the Chocolate Museum inspire the Coca-Cola makers to create their own museum? It occupies the territory of one of the largest soda production facilities in Europe, located in Novoperedelkino. The exhibition itself is also impressive in scale: it tells about the history and development of the brand, and it begins, you will be surprised, in 1886, when John Steve Pemberton, an American pharmacist, invented the recipe for the legendary soda. One of the exhibits is a recreated pharmacy of the inventor. Documentaries about Coca-Cola are shown on large plasma screens, and in the center of the exhibition is a model of the Moscow plant. And, of course, there were some exhibits - huge bottles of the drink, against which visitors happily take pictures.

Address: Moscow, st. Novoorlovskaya, 7

Operating mode: daily, time is discussed in advance with the administrator

Ticket price: for free

Museum "Russian felt boots"

The Russian Valenki Museum is the only one in Moscow where you can learn a lot about such an ordinary item and realize its full significance. Felt boots are not only comfortable, healing and, at times, irreplaceable shoes. Valenki are a symbol of true Russia with its broad soul and endless expanses. This unique (without beginning, without end, without seam, without scar) shoes has long been loved by everyone, regardless of rank and class.

The museum presents a variety of models: from embroidered felt boots of the late 19th century to modern ones, transformed by artists into art objects. Getting acquainted with the methods and tools of hand felting, the stages of industrial production of felted shoes and watching a video allow you to trace the path of the birth of felt boots from a pile of sheep wool to the finished product.

In our world there are a huge number of museums that display various exhibits, mainly cultural values. But there is also unusual museums of the world, in which visitors will find not quite simple works of art, but rather extravagant ones. It is precisely such museums that will be discussed here.

Any person is always interested in seeing something original and unusual, something that you cannot find everywhere. This is precisely why unusual museums attract visitors. Lovers of sweets will be interested in visiting the chocolate museum, and lovers of psychology will be interested in visiting the Sigmund Freud Museum of Dreams.

Even though such museums do not open often, there are already quite a large number of them, and over time there will be even more of them. On the pages of this site we will try to give as much information as possible about unusual museums in the world.

Having visited Lisbon, you can’t help but visit the most popular museum in the capital of Portugal - the National Carriage Museum. The building in which it is located is organically connected with the history of this transport that has sunk into oblivion. Back in 1787, Prince Juan, later King Juan VI, began construction of the Royal Riding Hall for horse riding training. The building itself was built according to the design of the architect Giacomo Azolini in the neoclassical style, but the subsequent decoration of the exterior and interior continued for more than 40 years.

These are unusual museums where visitors find themselves in a real tropical paradise, filled with beautiful butterflies that flutter everywhere. It maintains a tropical climate: temperature + 28 degrees and humidity - 70%. Often in such museums you can also see exotic birds, fish, and a large number of living tropical plants. This magical corner of the tropics will not leave anyone indifferent!

In the center of Stockholm there is an unusual museum dedicated to dance. In addition to permanent exhibitions, the museum also hosts temporary exhibitions that change from year to year. These exhibitions feature live performances. Many tourists even plan dates specifically, since the dance museum hosts various events depending on the time of year.

There is a kamikaze museum in Japan. It was opened in 1975 in the village of Tiran. Since 2007 it has been the city of Minamikyushu. The museum was opened on the site of a former Japanese Air Force air base. As the name implies, all museum exhibits are dedicated to Japanese kamikaze pilots who gave their lives for the prosperity of their homeland.

Everyone knows about the tragedy that happened on August 9, 1945 in Japan, when the US military dropped an atomic bomb on that city. But few people know that in the city itself there is a museum dedicated to this tragic event. Today we will tell you about the atomic bomb museum.

Winter is a wonderful, beautiful time. Everything around is white and snow is falling. A piece of all this beauty is a snowflake. How interesting and fun it is to watch snowflakes fall from the sky. As you probably already guessed, in this article we will look at the snowflake museum, which is located in Japan on the island of Hokkaido. It should be noted that this is the only museum of its kind in the world, so it is doubly interesting.

If you find yourself in Hungary, you simply must visit the marzipan museum. Yes, you heard right - this is a very interesting, unique and “sweet” museum. All exhibits presented in the museum are made of marzipan!

When we hear the word museum, the names immediately come to mind - the Hermitage, the Tretyakov Gallery, the Louvre... However, there are many strange museums in the world that are very different from these, which are familiar to the common man. Here are just a few of them.

Sewerage Museum in Paris, France

The Paris Sewerage Museum, located on the Quai d'Orsay near the Pont Alma, traces the history of the city's sewerage system from the first Aubrio tunnels under Charles V to the Belgran sewer network in use today. It is quite logical that this museum is located in an underground tunnel, going down into which visitors will be able to get acquainted with the history of city drains and the development of the sewerage network, as well as walk on foot both through the wide main tunnels and narrow secondary ones.

Ventriloquist Museum in Fort Mitchell, USA

At the Ventriloquist Museum in Kentucky, dummies tell funny stories, roll their eyes at cues and have their own opinions on everything. What makes the Fort Mitchell Museum unique is that it is the only one of its kind in the world. It seems that there are endless rows of wooden dolls lined up within its walls. With their “eyes” they follow all the movements of visitors, as if trying to hypnotize them and subjugate them to their own will. In this eerie place, many have to really hold back so as not to scream in fear.

Cesare Lombroso Museum of Criminal Anthropology in Turin, Italy

The famous Museum of Criminal Anthropology in Turin was founded in 1898 by the criminal physiognomist Cesare Lombroso. This museum houses a collection of about four hundred skulls of a wide variety of people. All this is a consequence of the museum’s founder’s obsession with the idea that criminal tendencies and various behavioral deviations are determined by the shape and size of a person’s skull. It was for this reason that the doctor collected the skulls of madmen, criminals, soldiers and ordinary citizens. His collection consists of life-size skeletons, human brains and images of dissected bodies. The main feature of the museum is the head of Lombroso himself, which is perfectly preserved and stored in a glass chamber.

Museum "Psychiatry: Industry of Death" in Los Angeles, USA

A scary museum called “Psychiatry: The Industry of Death” was founded in 2005 by Scientologists who criticized the current methods of treating psychiatric illnesses and mental disorders. The exhibition of this museum consists of materials telling how a worldwide conspiracy of doctors and pharmacists contributed to the destruction of American Indians and Australian Bushmen, which was a consequence of the beginning of apartheid and the Holocaust. The Los Angeles building also serves as the administrative center for the Citizens' Commission on Human Rights.

Barbed Wire Museum in La Crosse, USA

The original Barbed Wire Museum opened in 1971 in the US state of Kansas. He tells all visitors about the history and evolution of barbed wire, which is often popularly called the “Devil's Rope.” Today, the museum's exhibition consists of more than 2 thousand types of barbed wire; the most valuable exhibits date back to the 19th century. The sightseeing tour includes a visit to the Barbed Wire Hall of Fame and the Scientific Library. Most visitors also visit the cinema room, where an educational film about the history of this unusual but very profitable industry is shown.

Mutter Museum of Medical History in Philadelphia, USA

The Mütter Museum of Medical History is a museum of human diseases and pathologies, antique medical equipment and biological exhibits, located in an ancient medical complex in the United States. Most of all, this museum is “famous” for its unimaginable collection of skulls, but that’s not all - within the walls of this creepy establishment are collected all sorts of unique exhibits, for example, the corpse of a woman turned into soap in the ground where she was buried, Siamese twins with one liver , the skeleton of a newborn baby with two heads and much more. Entry to this terrible museum is prohibited to all faint-hearted and impressionable people, as well as pregnant women and children.

Rabbit Museum in Pasadena, USA

An American couple managed to get into the Guinness Book of Records thanks to rabbits - Candice Frazee and Steve Lubanski converted their house into a real museum of cute rodents. Their mansion in Pasadena has a collection of 28.5 thousand different items, one way or another related to rabbits and hares. It all started with an innocent gift, when a couple in love exchanged toy animals on Valentine’s Day. After that, they began to constantly give each other rabbits and everything connected with them - postcards, clay figurines, toys, dishes, lamps, furniture, bathroom accessories, and, in the end, they decided to have live rabbits. All this led to the museum opening in 1999.

UFO Museum and Research Center in Roswell, USA

The New Mexico UFO Museum and Research Center is one of the five most visited museums in the United States. This fact is quite logical, because people have always wanted to get their hands on the solution to the mystery of the supernatural, flying saucers and aliens. Most of the exhibits presented in the museum are ordinary images on a screen or on pieces of paper, but among them there are exceptions, such as the lid of a sarcophagus from Mexico or a container of dirt collected after a UFO accident that occurred in one of the local deserts in 1947. Obviously, it was this incident that became the starting point for the creation of a thematic museum in the southwest of America.

Hearse Museum in Barcelona, ​​Spain

It is noteworthy that the gloomy hearse museum is located in the building of the main funeral home of Catalonia. Anyone can get into the dark basement of this establishment and absolutely free of charge, although, as a rule, there are very few people interested. In several halls of the museum you can find ancient funeral carriages, upholstered in black velvet, mourning wagons, carriages and modern hearses, on which Barcelona residents were seen off on their last journey from the 18th century to the present day. In the Barcelona museum there are also the world's first mourning cars of the famous Studebaker brand and more modern vehicles intended for these mournful purposes.

Museum of Bratwurst and Currywurst in Berlin, Germany

In the capital of Germany in 2009, the grand opening of a thematic museum dedicated to fried sausages with curry powder and a special ketchup-based sauce took place. The reason for the appearance of such an unusual object is the sixtieth anniversary of the dish adored by the Germans. An introduction to the German delicacy takes place within the framework of an interactive exhibition, which includes a story about the history of the origin and role of Currywurst sausages in the culture of the country, as well as an introduction to the most delicious and unusual recipes for this dish. It is worth recognizing that in terms of popularity the museum itself is significantly inferior to the café operating next to it, where you can try the legendary dish in combination with a variety of sauces.

25. National Museum Te Papa Tongarewa (Wellington, New Zealand)

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The National Museum of New Zealand focuses on the history of the island nation and the culture of its indigenous people, the Maori. Nature lovers will be pleased with the huge collection of dinosaurs, birds, fish, insects and even mythical creatures - for example, orcs. And all because it was in New Zealand that Peter Jackson filmed the famous film trilogy “The Lord of the Rings”.

24. Museum of Latin American Art (Buenos Aires, Argentina)


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The museum's exhibition is devoted mainly to works of Latin American art of the 20th century: on the first floor there are works by modern masters, and on the second - earlier paintings. Almost all the exhibits are owned by Argentine philanthropist Eduardo Constantini.

23. Terracotta Warriors and Horses Museum (Xi'an, China)


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The Great Wall and the Terracotta Army are one of the most recognizable symbols of China, the construction of which took place during the reign of Qin Shi Huang, the first emperor of the unified Chinese state. The powerful ruler saw in them a stronghold of the security of his country and the continuation of personal power in the afterlife. It is noteworthy that among the figures there are no identical warriors: they all differ in rank, weapons used and facial expression.

22. Holocaust Memorial Yad Vashem (Jerusalem, Israel)


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The Holocaust Memorial Complex is located on Mount Herzl in western Jerusalem. Eternal memory of the disaster and tribute to all fighters against fascism.

21. National Gallery of Art (Washington, USA)


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The complex consists of a sculpture garden and two buildings connected by an underground passage. The museum's collection displays a myriad of works of art from different eras and styles. By the way, a considerable part of the exhibits are Hermitage masterpieces purchased by American connoisseurs of beauty from the Soviet authorities.

20. Inhotim (Brumadinho, Brazil)


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Art objects under the canopy of primeval forests? Why not! In the Brazilian park-museum, objects of contemporary art are placed directly in the open air. Of course, there are also indoor exhibition centers of various types. Bright Inhotim is often called “Disneyland for adults.”

19. Ricardo Brennand Institute (Recife, Brazil)


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The cultural center is owned by Brazilian collector Ricardo Brennand and includes a museum, art gallery, library and park. A considerable number of exhibits are dedicated to the colonial era of Brazil. Of particular interest to tourists is the impressive collection of weapons.

18. National Air and Space Museum (Washington, USA)


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The Smithsonian Institution Research Center is a real outlet for those who, for whatever reason, cannot become a pilot or. Under the high arches of the museum, unique examples of real aircraft and spacecraft are collected.

17. Getty Center (Los Angeles, California)


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The Getty Complex will delight its visitors with amazing architecture with stunning views of Los Angeles. The museum displays works by European photographers, sculptors and artists. The adjacent park is famous for the unique murmur of its waterfall. The research institute hosts training sessions and exhibitions.

16. Pergamon Museum (Berlin, Germany)


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The museum's exhibition is divided into three blocks: the Ancient Collection, the Museum of Islamic Art and the Western Asian Museum. Monumental works of architecture, sculpture, mosaics, relief and writing with a very difficult fate are presented here. The fact is that the bombing of Berlin during the Second World War affected the Pergamon Museum, as a result of which part of the collection was transported and has not yet been returned.

15. National World War II Museum (New Orleans, USA)


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The opening of the museum was timed to coincide with the 56th anniversary of the strategic landing of troops in France in 1944. The atrium of the building displays military equipment that contributed to the Allied victory in World War II.

14. Academy of Fine Arts (Florence, Italy)


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Within the walls of the first Academy of Painting in Europe you can see internationally recognizable objects of art, for example, Michelangelo’s “David”. Don't like sculpture? Anyway, don’t pass by: tourists who adapt to naked stone bodies in an original way will amuse you a lot.

13. Vincent Van Gogh Museum (Amsterdam, Netherlands)


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Beauty has no price, but we have repeatedly heard about the fabulous sums for which paintings by the famous Dutch post-impressionist artist are sold. In addition to the works of the master himself, the museum exhibits works by his equally famous contemporaries: Paul Gauguin, Claude Monet, Pablo Picasso.

12. British Museum (London, UK)


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Over the centuries, colonists from the British Empire discovered the most hidden corners of the planet and grabbed interesting “souvenirs” from there, which later became exhibits in the second most visited museum in the world. The huge collection spans a wide range of eras, cultures and art forms.

11. New Acropolis Museum (Athens, Greece)


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The complex, expensive and lengthy construction of the museum was due to two interrelated reasons. First, Greek history has accumulated a surplus of artifacts. Secondly, the British did not want to return the stolen historical and cultural values, citing the fact that they had nowhere to display and store them. In the end, I still had to give it away.

10. National Museum of Anthropology (Mexico City, Mexico)


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The culture of the indigenous peoples of Mesoamerica is shrouded in a haze of fantasy, ideas about their bloodthirstiness and unprecedented wealth. How true all this is, you can appreciate in the main museum of Mexico, where the ancient values ​​of such powerful civilizations of the past, such as the Mayans or Aztecs, are presented.

9. Vasa Museum (Stockholm, Sweden)


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The most visited museum in Scandinavia was built around the ship Vasa, which belonged to the Swedish navy in the 17th century. This is the oldest warship that has survived to this day. And what helped him stand the test of time, oddly enough, was a very quick wreck during his first voyage. Submerged in low salinity waters, the ship was not eaten by sea worms.

8. Rijksmuseum (Amsterdam, Netherlands)


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The central place in the exhibition of the museum, founded in 1808 by Louis Bonaparte, is occupied by paintings by Dutch masters of painting of the 15th–19th centuries. For example, here is Rembrandt’s “Night Watch” - a canvas measuring 363 by 437 cm, which is famous for its difficult history with attempts at destruction, a lot of mysteries and several mentions in films.

7. London National Gallery (London, UK)


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The art gallery receives about 6.5 million tourists annually. More than two thousand paintings are exhibited in chronological order, which helps the unprepared viewer to follow the development of Western European painting since the 13th century.

6. State Hermitage (St. Petersburg, Russia)


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A mecca for all guests of the Northern capital of Russia, with a mind-boggling number of exhibits, unimaginable decoration, as well as representative offices throughout the country and abroad.

5. Louvre (Paris, France)


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Trying to unravel the smile of “La Gioconda” through the lens of a smartphone is the sacred duty of every guest of Paris. To do this, you will have to look into the most popular art museum in the world. However, before your date with the painting by Leonardo da Vinci, you will have a photo session with the glass pyramid - the main entrance to the Louvre.

4. National Prado Museum (Madrid, Spain)


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Along with colorful works of art belonging to masters of the Flemish, English, German and French schools, the museum, of course, houses a rich collection of paintings by Spanish painters. Admirers of El Greco, Velazquez and Goya will be delighted.

3. Art Institute of Chicago (Chicago, USA)


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The museum is also the highest art institution in the United States, where such creators as Walt Disney were educated. Of course, among the exhibits there are many examples of American art.

2. Orsay Museum (Paris, France)


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The museum's collection is housed in a former railway station. In addition to a rich array of Impressionist and Post-Impressionist works, visitors can enjoy wonderful views of the Parisian Seine here.

1. Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, USA)


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In the “Big Apple” there’s already nowhere for an apple to fall, but here there are still millions of visitors running from one city attraction to another in order to get acquainted as quickly as possible. The Metropolitan Museum of Art will not work quickly: even a cursory acquaintance with some of the “miscellaneous” exhibits will take many hours.

Have you ever been to an interesting museum? Tell us about it in the comments.