World-Museum-Day

World Museum Day!

World Museum Day has been celebrated around the world, including in San Antonio, Texas. Many museums in San Antonio participate in this event by hosting special exhibits, events, or giving tourists free entrance. San Antonio has a wide variety of museums, each with a special offering. These include art, science, history, and cultural museums.

The city’s museums offer a wide variety of learning and exploration opportunities, regardless of your interests. In celebration of the World Museum Day, here’s our top 10 list of best museums to visit in Downtown:

  • San Antonio Museum of Art
San Antonio Museum of Art
Photo courtesy of San Antonio Museum of Art

One of San Antonio’s sought-after attractions is the San Antonio Museum of Art. It has a whooping collection of spectacular artworks and treasures around the world with over 30,000 objects. The San Antonio Museum of Art encompasses 5,000 years of history and culture, including antiquities, and is housed in the former Lone Star Brewery on the San Antonio River Walk. Asian art, contemporary art, Latin American art, and the artwork of the ancient Mediterranean world are the themes of the galleries. Each collection contains significant pieces of world culture, but the pre-dynastic, late Roman, and Byzantine artifacts are especially stunning.

  • The Witte Museum
Witte Museum
Photo courtesy of Witte Museum

The Witte Museum is a unique location that blends artwork, textiles, dioramas, and artifacts to trace the history of Texas from antiquity to the present. The museum, which is situated in Brackenridge Park, is the repository for a sizable number of sculptures made by Bonnie MacLeary, a native of San Antonio. The artwork created in Texas by both artists who live and work there as well as those who celebrate its history and culture is the museum’s principal draw. The Witte Museum also features a number of other fascinating exhibitions, such as the Antarctic Dinosaurs, old San Antonio residences, the Hertzberg Circus Collection, and the H-E-B Body Adventure, an engaging youth health program.

  • The Doseum
Doseum
Photo courtesy of Doseum

Through interactive exhibitions, games, and experiments, the two-story DoSeum invites children to learn about science, art, and literacy. Children will enjoy playing on the DoSeum’s outdoor playground just as much as parents will like watching them interact with displays that teach them to build and create new things (or pass the Spy Academy).

  • Hopscotch
Hopscotch World Museum Day
Photo courtesy of Hopscotch

Numerous immersive and interactive exhibits created by the most cutting-edge local, national, and international artists are displayed in this 20,000 square foot venue. Exhibits in Hopscotch are constantly changing so make sure to follow their social media page to be updated with the current installations. Each exhibit is worth the gram! Not to mention their public-facing lounge that includes a full bar, large patio, food truck, and gift shop.

  • McNay Art Museum
McNay Art Museum
McNay Art Museum

The 25-acre property of the McNay Art Museum features a variety of art forms, including paintings, sculptures, works on paper, and more, creating a singular art museum experience. It boasts a wonderful collection of contemporary works of art housed in a grand historic estate and colonial revival mansion in Sunset Hills. Their collection includes sculptures and arts from the 19th & 20th century inspired by American and European touches. Pablo Picasso, Georgia O’Keeffe, Henri Matisse and Diego Rivera are just some of the renowned artists that were featured in this museum. Additionally, if you’re a person who loves to read, you probably love their library featuring the Tobin Hill Collection of Theater Arts with a plethora of 30,000 books.

  • Briscoe Western Art Museum
Briscoe Western Art Museum
Photo courtesy of Briscoe Western Art Museum

The Briscoe Western Art Museum, which is located on the San Antonio River Walk, contains artworks that use paintings, sculptures, sketches, and other media to depict the history of the wild, wild west, from pre-colonial times through the arrival of the first settlers and the heyday of Texas ranchers. Another draw of the museum is the McNutt Sculpture Garden, a magnificent outdoor display space with bronze sculptures portraying cowboys, Native Americans, animals, and events that shaped the Western Frontier. You can find western paintings as well as peculiar pieces of art like covered wagons and Pancho Villa’s saddle.

  • UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures
UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures
Photo courtesy of UTSA Institute of Texan Cultures

The numerous cultures that make up the Lone Star State are highlighted in this museum’s exhibitions and activities, which also include lovely music, delectable food, traditions, and art. Through displays, programs, and events, the museum aims to present the state’s ethnic and cultural past. Millions of historical photographs are housed in the museum’s collection, which also includes a library devoted to the state’s ethnic and cultural past.

  • The Buckhorn Saloon and Museum
The Buckhorn Saloon and Museum
Photo courtesy of The Buckhorn Saloon and Museum

In 1881, saloon owner Albert Friedrich established the museum by taking unusual objects such as antlers and stuffed animals in exchange for alcohol. The custom persisted throughout Friedrich’s lifetime, resulting in a collection of 520 species of wildlife and interesting things. The Texas Rangers Museum, which houses genuine Texas Ranger Division items from notable Rangers including Ray Martinez, Joaquin Jackson, Frank Hamer, and John B. Armstrong, is also located on the property.

  • Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio
Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio
Photo courtesy of Holocaust Memorial Museum of San Antonio

The Holocaust Memorial Museum in San Antonio presents facts on one of the most catastrophic incidents in human history. Three different displays that cover the history of the Holocaust, the rise of the Nazis, and the suffering of Jews in concentration camps and under Nazi control split the museum into these three sections. The educational program, which incorporates educators, students, and academic institutions to integrate Holocaust history into the curriculum, is one of the museum’s most important components. Visitors get a one-of-a-kind chance to be given a tour of the museum by a local survivor at no cost.

  • Ruby City
Dror Baldinger
Photo courtesy of Dror Baldinger

Linda Pace, a well-known art collector and patron, and the Linda Pace Foundation founded the center. This modern art gallery that allows contemporary artists to create and practice their crafts. A modern art gallery that allows contemporary artists to create. Linda Pace, a well-known art collector and patron, and the Linda Pace Foundation founded the center. There are nearly 900 paintings, sculptures, and installations in Ruby City, which is located on Camp Street. Lynda Benglis, Andrea Bowers, Nathan Carter, Dorothy Cross, and Alex de Leon are just a few of the artists whose work is on display in the gallery.

During World Museum Day, visitors to San Antonio can take part in a variety of events and activities at the city’s numerous galleries, making it an incredible opportunity to discover the city’s cultural treasures.

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