Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, serves as a welcoming and inclusive place for all people, connecting the communities of Houston with diverse histories of art spanning 5,000 years and six continents. Through our permanent collections, special exhibitions, learning and interpretation programs, studio instruction, publications, conservation, and scholarly research, we strive to inspire appreciation and understanding of the broadest spectrum of human achievement.

Houston has been hailed as America’s most diverse city, a reflection of how the nation will look in the coming decades. By its nature, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, along with the Glassell School of Art and the two house museums—Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, and Rienzi—embodies the character of this city through the Museum’s staff, visitors, mission, programs, and collections.

Although the MFAH depends on admissions revenue to support its operations, the Museum provides a number of opportunities for visitors to experience the collections, exhibitions, and programs at no charge. Nearly 40 percent of visitors to the MFAH and both house museums are admitted for free.

MFAH’s History:

In 1900, a women’s volunteer organization shared a love of art with school children in Houston by taking art reproductions into classrooms. The idea of collecting original works of art took hold, as did the aspiration of opening an art museum in Houston. Land was acquired at Main Street and Montrose Boulevard, and the first iteration of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, opened in 1924. Over the door, the public could read this inscription: “ERECTED BY THE PEOPLE FOR THE USE OF THE PEOPLE.” The original Museum had a collection of 60 works of art.

 

Now, more than a century later, the MFAH is one of the top art museums in the country, and its collection holds nearly 80,000 works of art. What began as a focus on European and North American art has become an encyclopedic collection that also includes Asian and African art, Latin American art, Pre-Columbian and African gold, art of the Islamic worlds, Judaica, decorative arts and design, photography and video, works on paper, costumes, and textiles.

 

The 14-acre campus features three buildings for the display of art: the Caroline Wiess Law Building (renamed in 1998), the Audrey Jones Beck Building (opened in 2000), and the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building (opened in 2020). In addition, the Museum campus includes the Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden, the Glassell School of Art, and the Brown Foundation, Inc. Plaza. Nearby are two house museums: Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens, and Rienzi.

 

In the years since the original building opened, the MFAH has truly become a place for all people, and it reflects the international diversity and dynamism of the city of Houston.

 

MFAH’s House Museums:

Rienzi, the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts, is situated on four acres of wooded gardens in the historic River Oaks neighborhood, about five miles from the main MFAH campus and about two miles from Bayou Bend, the MFAH house museum for American decorative arts and paintings. Formerly the home of philanthropists Carroll Sterling Masterson and Harris Masterson III, Rienzi was designed by prominent Houston architect John Staub in 1952. Opened to the public in 1999, Rienzi houses a substantial collection of European decorative arts, paintings, furnishings, porcelain, and miniatures. Rienzi welcomes visitors for tours, family programs, lectures, music performances, and a variety of special events.

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