Museo del Novecento
The Museo del Novecento transforms a 1950s rationalist building into Italy's premier showcase of 20th-century art, with 400 works spanning Futurism to Arte Povera.
About Museo del Novecento
The Museo del Novecento transforms a 1950s rationalist building into Italy's premier showcase of 20th-century art, with 400 works spanning Futurism to Arte Povera. You'll encounter Umberto Boccioni's revolutionary sculptures that literally exploded traditional forms, Lucio Fontana's slashed canvases that redefined space, and Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo's massive social realist masterpiece The Fourth Estate. The collection focuses exclusively on Italian movements, making it more cohesive than most modern art museums.
The building's spiral ramp pulls you chronologically through Italy's artistic evolution, from the explosive energy of early Futurism through the conceptual experiments of the 1960s. Each floor opens into naturally lit galleries where you can actually see brushstrokes and textures - the lighting design is exceptional. The crowds thin out significantly after the second floor, giving you space to contemplate Fontana's slashed canvases and Mario Sironi's urban landscapes in peace.
Most visitors rush to the top-floor terrace for Duomo views and miss the real treasures on floors 2-3. The €5 entry fee (free on Tuesday afternoons after 2 PM) makes this Milan's best art bargain, but the audio guide costs an additional €5 and honestly isn't worth it - the wall texts are comprehensive. Skip the ground-floor temporary exhibitions unless they're specifically interesting to you.
Skip the Queue
Live availability and skip-the-line options from our booking partners.
Booking powered by our partners. DAIZ may earn a commission.







