Varese (Italian: [vaˈreːze] ( listen), Latin Baretium, archaic German: Väris, Varés in Varesino) is a city and comune in north-western Lombardy, northern Italy, 55 kilometres (34 mi) north of Milan.
Restaurants in Varese
5.0 based on 108 reviews
5.0 based on 102 reviews
ATTENTION The Castiglioni Museum will be closed from July 30th to August 30th. We are waiting for you in September, even with the first edition of VARESE ARCHEOFILM, from 6 to 9 September at the Giardini Estensi. A fascinating journey between archeology and ethnology, from desert to savannah, between myth and reality. An unforgettable experience through unique finds.
4.5 based on 656 reviews
Good parking. Little coffee shop. Larger restaurant (which we didn't try). Small shop. We saw the temporary Sean Scully exhibition which was thoroughly enjoyable with lots of space in which to display the a huge collection of work. Enjoyed some of rest of collection too. Views onto garden were lovely. Unfortunately raining so unable to enjoy the outside space which looked really special. Worth the visit.
4.5 based on 60 reviews
The museum opened in 1900 to preserve some of the artistic heritage of the Sanctuary of Santa Maria del Monte, on the summit of the Sacro Monte of Varese, a Unesco World Heritage site since 2003. Later on the Museum has enriched its heritage thanks to new donations. The most important was the one made by Joseph Baroffio Dall'Aglio who gave the Sanctuary also the money to build the current home. The latest restoration, completed in 2001, widened the exhibition space and enhanced the collections. In eight rooms, including old rooms with rests of frescoes, there are works that tell the history and the art of the Sacro Monte, while the Baroffio picture gallery provides a path among Flemish, Dutch, Lombard, Venetian and Emilian paintings ranging from the 15th to the 18th century. The modern room hosts around sixty works of artists of the 20th century.
4.5 based on 140 reviews
4.0 based on 30 reviews
In all the museums of the world it is forbidden to touch, in this no. Because knowing through touch is a fantastic opportunity to understand the world and art, even for all those who see, that can doing blindfolded visits, and it is a way to allow people who do not see us to know about art through hands. This museum houses a collection of wooden tactile models which, like a three-dimensional encyclopedia to be browsed with hands, reproduce aspects of the landscape, archeology and architecture. There are also multi-sensory paths and installations, in which the visitor can check how the senses speak a special language capable of making us better understand all aspects of reality. The world becomes a kaleidoscope of possibilities, which asks to be "heard" with all the senses: fun aspects and new forms of knowledge of reality, monuments and tactile games, sensory emotions and art, teaching and experimentation.
4.0 based on 37 reviews
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