The real Milan is inside these 11 museums

From historic architecture to post-industrial conversions, from house museums to vast exhibition spaces: here are the galleries and museums of Milan you should have seen at least once in your lifetime.

In the movie Grown Ups, during a dinner scene, the character played by Adam Sandler says, “We gotta go to Milan,” to which his conversation partner replies, “Milan what? Italy? What's in Milan?” 

You will probably find this dialogue familiar even if you haven't seen the film, because it went viral on Instagram and TikTok during the Winter Olympics, used ironically by some tourists to introduce videos that pretty much always show the Duomo and then the means of transport that will take them home.

There is no better opportunity to take on the challenge of introducing foreign visitors, but also helping forgetful citizens – exhausted by all the problems this city presents them with every day – to rediscover some of Milan's most beautiful museums and galleries, which, in addition to hosting amazing collections and high-profile exhibitions, are also located in buildings that tell the ancient and contemporary history of the Lombard capital.

eL Seed Waves Only Exist Because the Wind Blows, 2024. Courtesy the artist and Pirelli HangarBicocca, Milan, 2024 © 2024 eL Seed / SIAE. Photo Lorenzo Palmieri

The selected locations do not follow an encyclopedic logic nor do they aim to offer an exhaustive list, which would require many more lines of text. Rather, they are a series of milestones spanning different eras, languages, and ways of understanding the relationship between art, culture, architecture, and urban space. From the solemn monumentality of the Palazzo dell'Arte, which, together with the Triennale tells the story of Milan's twentieth century, to the historical stratification of the Castello Sforzesco, which many people pass through without ever buying a ticket to enter the rooms and discover its collections. 

Palazzo Citterio © Walter Vecchio

From the renovation of former industrial buildings that now serve as the setting for site-specific contemporary art installations, as in the case of Fondazione Prada and Pirelli HangarBicocca, to some spaces that truly hold the essence of “Milanese spirit” and the modern history of Milan: the bourgeois refinement  of Villa Necchi Campiglio, the intimacy of the Boschi Di Stefano House-Museum, the rationalist elegance of Casa Corbellini-Wassermann, now home to the MASSIMODECARLO Gallery, but also the Pavilion of Contemporary Art, and Palazzo Citterio, a new part of the Grande Brera project.

Triennale Milano © Triennale Milano. Photo Gianluca Di Ioia

Taken together, these places reveal a city made up of interiors, courtyards, gardens, industrial spaces, and modern and contemporary architecture. These museums and galleries are perfect for those visiting Milan for the first time, but perhaps even more so for those who live here and don't remember – or don't know – how many interesting things there are to see, often just a tram ride away.

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