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Category: Museums

  • National Museum of Funeral History

    National Museum of Funeral History

    415 Barren Springs Drive

    Houston, Texas, 77090, USA

    281-876-3063

    Discover America’s largest collection of authentic historical funeral service items in 19 permanent exhibits. Learn about hearses through history, caskets and coffins, plus the funerals of Presidents, Popes and celebrities and the history of embalming and cremation while you witness the cultural heritage of the funeral service industry and its time-honored tradition of compassion.  

    PERMANENT EXHIBITS

    With 19 permanent exhibits, the museum offers an unrivaled, educational and historical experience, including:

  • The Museum Fine Arts, Houston

    The Museum Fine Arts, Houston

    1001 Bissonnet Street

    Houston, Texas, 77005, USA

    713-639-7300

    Explore all of the exceptional exhibitions, installations, and virtual programming.

    Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Masterpieces provides a rare opportunity to see the distinguished Pearlman Collection outside of its home at Princeton University. Henry Pearlman’s personal approach to collecting sought to capture the momentum of art and thought at the dawn of the modern era. The exhibition juxtaposes Pearlman works with selections from the MFAH collections.

    The art of Pipilotti Rist transforms the Museum’s Cullinan Hall into a cosmic getaway. Pipilotti Rist: Pixel Forest and Worry Will Vanish brings together two experiential works from the MFAH collection: Pixel Forest, an installation of thousands of hanging LED lights; and Worry Will Vanish, a video projection that takes visitors on a dreamlike journey.

    The Museum has a long-standing commitment to the arts of India. With Woven Wonders: Indian Textiles from the Parpia Collection, we further our representation of the rich cultural heritage of Houston’s South Asian community and explore the history of one of India’s most treasured art forms.

    Visitors will be amazed by William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows. The expansive work of the celebrated South African artist remains so compelling and urgent because it demonstrates the universal need to address inequity and social justice everywhere throughout the world.

    Our new galleries for Art of the Islamic Worlds present, for the first time, the full extent of the MFAH holdings in Islamic art, enhanced by a significant selection of Persian masterworks on extended loan from the distinguished collection of Hossein Afshar. These permanent galleries for art from historic Islamic lands enable us to enhance our effort to reflect the city whose many communities we serve.

    A special highlight has been introducing Houston—and the world—to the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building, dedicated to the first comprehensive display of the Museum’s international collections of modern and contemporary art. This beautiful facility, and the surrounding plazas, gardens, and commissions, match the growth, diversity, and dynamism of our city. The inaugural presentation Connecting Currents comprises thematic installations of art from the 1960s to 2020.

    When you plan your visits, check the ever-changing calendar of events for activities throughout the Museum, including the Glassell School of Art and our two house museums: Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens and Rienzi.

    We offer a number of ways to enjoy the Museum for free. For example, MFAH members receive free general admission every day, and Family-level memberships include the children in the household. Children 12 and younger are always admitted free, and on weekends all children receive free general admission when they show their card from any Texas public library. General admission is free for everyone on Thursdays, courtesy of Shell Oil Company.

  • Contemporary Arts Museum Houston

    Contemporary Arts Museum Houston

    5216 Montrose Blvd.

    Houston, Texas, 77006, USA

    713-284-8250

    Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH) is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national, and regional art of our time. Founded in 1948, the Museum prides itself on presenting new art and documenting its role in modern life through exhibitions, lectures, original publications, and a variety of educational programs and events.

    CAMH occupies an iconic stainless steel building in the heart of the Houston Museum District. This highly recognizable building was designed for the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston by the award-winning architect Gunnar Birkerts and opened in 1972. The building’s two floors of gallery space offer six to eight exhibitions each year. Exhibitions presented in The Brown Foundation Gallery feature work by leading internationally-recognized artists working at the vanguard of contemporary art, as well as thematic exhibitions organized around questions central to the nature of art and life today. While in the Nina and Michael Zilkha Gallery, the focus is on work by established artists as well as those who are emerging and early in their careers. In addition, the Museum Gift Shop offers yet another art-centric experience for visitors through an array of curated merchandise—the purchase of which goes to support CAMH programs and operations.

    Each exhibition at CAMH is accompanied by a publication, designed for use by scholars and the general public. While the catalogues provide lasting documentation of the exhibition, they also contribute to original knowledge and scholarship about contemporary art and the international discourse around it.

  • San Jacinto Battle Monument and Museum

    San Jacinto Battle Monument and Museum

    1 MONUMENT CIRCLE

    La Porte, Texas, 77571, USA

    281-479-2421

    The San Jacinto Museum of History is housed in the base of the San Jacinto Monument. The Museum is operated by the San Jacinto Museum and Battlefield Association — a non-profit organization — in association with the Texas Historical Commission. 

    More than just a gateway to a great view, the Museum is your gateway to Texas culture! It was established not only to honor those who fought here in 1836, but also to re-visualize the history of Texas and the Spanish Southwest. It was created as a steward of history, and to promote friendship between Texas, Mexico, Spain, France and Latin America.

    Special treasures can be found from Mexican Texas, the Texas revolution, and the Republic of Texas. But the museum also holds art and artifacts from the Spanish conquest, French Texas (a small collection), Spanish colonial life, the Mexican Revolution and the Anglo colonization of Mexican Texas. Texas’s early statehood and the Civil War are also featured.

    From books to bayonets, swords to sketches, there’s something here for everyone. So turn off your television. Reschedule your appointments. Take the day off. You have a date with destiny! What are you waiting for? Visit us today.