The Best Museums to Visit in São Paulo
Although best known for being Brazil’s financial capital, São Paulo is also rich in art and culture. Here you can find some of the best museums in the country, with renowned collections comparable to other great cultural centers, such as New York and Paris. Read our guide to the top museums in São Paulo.
Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP)
Museum
The São Paulo Art Museum, or simply MASP, is the flagship of the city’s museums. The four red concrete pillars on which the museum sits create a landmark on São Paulo’s most famous street, Avenida Paulista. Founded in 1947, MASP was the first modern museum in the country. Today it brings together more than 10,000 works, including paintings, sculptures, objects, photographs and clothing from various periods, covering the European, African, Asian and American continents. On the second floor, visitors can take a peek at Lina Bo Bardi’s controversial crystal easels. Bardi created the easels back in 1968 shaking up the Brazilian art community with this radical design statement. In 1996 the easels were removed, but returned in 2015 to hold paintings of, Rembrandt, Cézanne, Renoir, Manet, Matisse, Volpi and Portinari, as well as contemporary, modern artists.
Opening Hours: Tuesdays 10am-8pm; Wednesday-Sunday: 10am-6pm. Closed on Mondays.
Museu de Arte Moderna (MAM)
Museum, Park
Opening Hours: Tuesday-Sunday 10am-6pm. Closed on Mondays.
Museu da Imagem e do Som (MIS)
Museum
Opening Hours: Tuesdays to Fridays 10am-8pm; Saturdays 10am-9pm; Sundays 10am-7pm. Closed on Mondays.
Pinacoteca
Building, Memorial, Museum
Opening Hours: Monday-Sunday, 10am-5.30pm; Closed on Tuesdays
Museu do Futebol
Museum, Stadium
Opening Hours: Tuesday-Sunday 9am-6pm. Closed on Mondays.
Catavento Cultural
Museum
Created to be an interactive space presenting science in an exciting way for children and adults, the Catavento Museum is one of the most visited museums in the city. Here visitors can touch a real meteorite, get to know the human body from the inside, understand how an energy generator works and find out that the Sun, seen from close up, is not as round as you may think. The museum is divided into four sections: Universe – from outer space to Earth; Life – from the first living being to human life; Ingenuity – man’s creations; and Society – controversial issues of human society.
Opening Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 9am-5pm. Closed on Mondays.