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Colmar · Quartier des Tanneurs

Unterlinden Museum and Isenheim Altarpiece

The Unterlinden Museum houses one of Europe's most emotionally devastating works of art: Matthias Grünewald's Isenheim Altarpiece, painted between 1512 and 1516.

Unterlinden Museum and Isenheim Altarpiece, Colmar · Quartier des Tanneurs
Category
Museum
Duration
2 hours
Best Time
Any time
Entry
EUR 13
Rating
4.6 (5,063)
The place

About Unterlinden Museum and Isenheim Altarpiece

The Unterlinden Museum houses one of Europe's most emotionally devastating works of art: Matthias Grünewald's Isenheim Altarpiece, painted between 1512 and 1516. This isn't your typical religious art. The crucifixion panel shows Christ's body covered in thorns and lacerations, with figures below consumed by physical grief. The resurrection panel blazes with supernatural light that Herzog & de Meuron literally designed their 2015 building extension around. The altarpiece has three configurations that were rotated through the liturgical year, so you'll see multiple layers of panels.

You'll enter through the modern wing before reaching the altarpiece in its climate-controlled sanctum. Most people gasp when they first see the crucifixion, it's that visceral. The space stays quiet, almost reverent, even with crowds. After the altarpiece's intensity, the 13th-century Dominican cloister offers relief with its peaceful arches. The museum also holds works by Cranach and Holbein, plus Alsatian folk art, but honestly, you came here for Grünewald.

At EUR 13, it's expensive for what amounts to seeing one masterpiece, but that masterpiece justifies the trip to Colmar entirely. Skip the upper floors of regional artifacts unless you have extra time. The audio guide costs EUR 3 and helps with the altarpiece's complex iconography, though the visual impact needs no explanation. Plan 45 minutes minimum for the altarpiece alone.

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The details

Practical bits

WalkingMinimal walking
The place

Getting there

Address
Pl. des Unterlinden, 68000 Colmar, France
Neighborhood
Quartier des Tanneurs
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Good to know

Tips, answered

Arrive right at 9 AM opening (10 AM on Wednesdays) to have the Isenheim Altarpiece room completely to yourself for photos without crowds

Don't rush the crucifixion panel, spend at least 15 minutes studying the details in Christ's wounds and the expressions of grief below

Head to the medieval cloister after viewing the altarpiece, the peaceful courtyard helps you process what you've just seen

Plan for about 2 hours.

Unterlinden Museum and Isenheim Altarpiece is in the Quartier des Tanneurs neighborhood of Colmar. The address is Pl. des Unterlinden, 68000 Colmar, France. The area is well-served by metro.

This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.

Closed on Tuesday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.

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Théâtre Municipal de Colmar
Cultural Site

Théâtre Municipal de Colmar

This neoclassical theater from 1849 sits right in Colmar's old town, and you'll recognize it immediately by its cream-colored columns and elegant pediment. The real draw is the interior: a jewel box auditorium with velvet seats, ornate ceiling frescoes, and three tiers of balconies that feel authentically 19th-century. You can catch opera, classical concerts, ballet, and contemporary theater here from September through May, with performances typically starting at 20:30. The experience begins in the marble-floored foyer where locals gather for intermission champagne, speaking in hushed French and German. Once inside the 700-seat auditorium, you'll notice how intimate everything feels compared to modern venues. The acoustics are genuinely excellent from any seat, and the sight lines mean you're never more than 20 rows from the stage. During intermission, you can explore the grand staircase and admire the period details that survived both world wars. Most travel guides treat this as a quick photo stop, but it's really meant to be experienced during a performance. Tickets range from 15 EUR for upper balcony seats to 65 EUR for orchestra level. Skip the expensive front row seats, the third row gives you better perspective without the neck strain. The weekday matinee performances offer the best value and smaller crowds.

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