The National Fine Arts Museum in Santiago, beside the city’s Forestal Park, is the place to see the country’s principal collection of paintings and sculpture.
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José Miguel de la Barra 650, Santiago, Chile
Tues-Sun 10am-6:45pm
Free
Postcard of 1910. Juan Tamurgo (Editor).
Although the collection of works held today by the National Fine Arts Museum began in the mid-nineteenth century - mostly as a teaching tool for the University of Chile’s Arts School - it was not until 1880 that the National Museum of Paintings, as it was then known, was founded.
When it opened on the upper floors of the National Congress in Santiago, it had just 140 paintings, not all of which were originals.
Seven years later, the Museum moved to a building in western Santiago’s Quinta Normal Park but, as the collection grew, this became cramped and, in 1901, a tender was issued for the design and construction of the current building on what was then wasteland alongside the Mapocho River.
It was inaugurated in September 1910, as part of the celebration of the centenary of Chile’s Independence, with an exhibition that included work from Europe, the United States and other Latin American countries as well as Chile.
The exhibition catalogue proudly noted that, “The enthusiasm with which great artists from around the entire world accepted the invitation proves that [Chile’s] fame as a cultured nation is perfectly established in the great intellectual centers”.
The tender for the building that now houses the National Fine Arts Museum (and, in its western section, the University of Chile’s Contemporary Art Museum) was won by Emile Jéquier, a French architect who, because of his father’s work, had been born in Chile.
Built in the neoclassical style with art nouveau details, it has clear references to the Petit Palais in Paris. Jéquier’s other work in Santiago includes the Mapocho railway station (now a convention center) and the Stock Exchange.
Next to the Museum is one of Santiago’s best-loved parks, Parque Forestal. Designed by French landscaper, Georges Dubois, in the late nineteenth century, it stretches along the river from the Pío Nono Bridge down to the former Mapocho train station.
Opposite the Museum is the Santa Lucía Hill. At the foot of this rocky outcrop, conquistador Pedro de Valdivia founded Santiago on 12 February 1541.
Public visiting the National Fine Arts Museum exhibition.