Albertina Museum
The Albertina sits atop the Hofburg complex housing one of the world's most impressive collections of prints and drawings, with over one million works spanning five centuries.
About Albertina Museum
The Albertina sits atop the Hofburg complex housing one of the world's most impressive collections of prints and drawings, with over one million works spanning five centuries. You'll see original sketches by Dürer, Michelangelo's studies, and complete series by masters like Rembrandt and Schiele. The Habsburg state rooms upstairs showcase imperial living at its most extravagant, with gilded furniture, crystal chandeliers, and floors so polished you can see your reflection.
The experience flows between intimate gallery spaces where you examine delicate works on paper and grand palatial rooms that make you feel tiny. The print galleries keep lighting deliberately low to protect the works, creating an almost reverent atmosphere. Then you climb to the state rooms where everything explodes in gold and marble. The contrast hits you immediately: from studying a pencil sketch worth millions to standing in a ballroom where emperors once waltzed.
Most guides oversell the permanent collection, which rotates constantly since works on paper can't handle continuous light exposure. The real draw is whatever major exhibition is running, usually Impressionist or modern masters that justify the €16 entry fee. Skip the audio guide and spend your time in the Batliner Collection of modern art on the second floor, which most tourists miss entirely. The state rooms photograph beautifully but take only 20 minutes to see properly.
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