Once known for smog, traffic and tacky architecture, Athens is a city reformed thanks to fortunes brought by the 2004 Summer Olympics. Spotless parks and streets, an ultra-modern subway, new freeways, an accessible airport and all signs in perfect English make the city easily negotiable. Meriting more than a stopover en route to the islands, sophisticated Athens sites include many pillars of Western history, from the Acropolis to the Temple of Olympian Zeus, as well as treasures in the National Archaeological Museum.
Restaurants in Athens
5.0 based on 1 reviews
Exhibiting contemporary Greek artists. Providing a variety of the artistic flavors in Greece.
5.0 based on 3 reviews
Roma Gallery is a Greek art gallery with an international program devoted to postwar and contemporary art. Roma Gallery specializes in private sales in the secondary market of prominent 20th Century artists. The gallery collaborates with several American and European artists, galleries and foundations. It is committed to promoting new, innovative talents as well as advancing the legacies of artists by working closely with their families, foundations and estates. Roma Gallery is focused on embracing new generations of collectors, curators and audiences by selectively and passionately working with expertise and commitment worldwide. Roma Gallery provides collectors with a private viewing room by appointment only. The viewing room is located on the second floor of the building above the gallery space. This setting allows clients to discuss, acquire in-depth information and evaluate their needs with expert advice.
Roma Gallery is located at Kolonaki neighborhood and is a great art gallery! I enjoyed the artworks especially Angelo Accardi's ! I also met Artemis, who is very friendly and explain everything! Thank you!
4.5 based on 1,189 reviews
A dynamic cultural institution in the centre of Athens, the Museum of Cycladic Art focuses on promoting the ancient cultures of the Aegean and Cyprus, with particular emphasis on Cycladic art of the third millennium BC. The Museum’s permanent collections include 3000 Cycladic, ancient Greek, and ancient Cypriot artefacts, witnesses to the cultures that flourished in the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean from the fourth millennium BC to approximately the sixth century AD. The Museum of Cycladic Art’s temporary exhibitions focus on archaeology and modern and contemporary art with the aim to familiarize the public with important twentieth and twenty-first century artists and to explore the relations between ancient cultures and modern art. Salvador Dali, Pablo Picasso, Thomas Struth, Louise Bourgeois, Sarah Lucas, Ugo Rondinone, Jannis Kounellis, Mario Merz, Ai Weiwei, and Cy Twombly are among the artists hosted.
Special exhibit was amazing. Permanent collection also informative and inspiring. I especially liked the Cycladic floor.
4.5 based on 8 reviews
Est.2012 with a focus to present the best young contemporary art and thought in the city
4.5 based on 1,501 reviews
The Benaki Museum is among the most extensive and innovative cultural organizations in Europa. Diverse cultures from all historical periods and geographical areas meet contemporary art across a network of venues all over Athens – and beyond. The Benaki Museum of Greek Culture presents the history and art of the Greek world from prehistory to the 20th century, through 6.000 objects arranged over four floors. Antonis Benakis (1873-1954) was a passionate art collector. He belonged to a cosmopolitan circle of connoisseurs and intellectuals in Alexandria, Egypt. Following his return to Athens and the death of his benefactor father Emmanuel, Antonis bequeathed to Greece his collections and parental home, which opened in April 1931 as the Benaki Museum. After a comprehensive refurbishment, the building reopened on 7 June 2000 as the Benaki Museum of Greek Culture while the remaining diverse collections have since been housed in new buildings (see Benaki Museum of Islamic Art).
I have walked by this museum many times on my visits to Athens. It is close to the city center and Syntagma square and the Kolonaki area. I was totally amazed by the collection - it is well displayed and takes you on a historical tour of a collection of artifacts and art - best to start at the main floor and just follow the numbers for each rooms and this gives a great view or the development of the Athens and Greek region from ancient to more modern times. It was most fascinating and would definitely recommend this if you are there - it provides much more about the area then just the Parthenon. You can spend as much or as little time - but I would say a minimum of about 1 - 1.5 hours.
Skoufa Gallery opened in 1981 exhibiting works by contemporary Greek artists. Host of historically significant, contemporary artists of the 1930's, the gallery aims to introduce the then-emerging generation of Greek artists. In 2000 the gallery opened its additional space on the first floor of the building to feature a selection of fine art pieces and exhibitions primarily by emerging artists.
4.0 based on 2 reviews
ThingsTodoPost © 2018 - 2024 All rights reserved.