Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía

National art museum · 20th–21st century · Madrid, Spain

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía

The Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid is Spain’s national museum of 20th- and 21st-century art, most celebrated as the permanent home of Pablo Picasso’s Guernica (1937). Occupying a converted 18th-century hospital building substantially expanded by Jean Nouvel in 2005, the museum holds one of the world’s foremost collections of modern Spanish art alongside major international holdings in Surrealism, Cubism, and contemporary movements.

Type
National museum of 20th- and 21st-century art
Period
Building 1788 (Hospital General de Madrid); museum opened 1990, national status 1992
Style
Neoclassical hospital (original); Nouvel Extension (2005) — steel and glass
Location
Calle de Santa Isabel 52, 28012 Madrid, Spain
Coordinates
40.4079° N, 3.6967° W

Overview

The Reina Sofía stands at the southern end of Madrid’s Paseo del Prado museum corridor, forming the contemporary anchor of what is informally called the “Golden Triangle of Art” together with the Prado and the Thyssen-Bornemisza. The museum’s collection focuses on art from 1900 onward and is particularly strong in the Spanish avant-garde: Picasso, Miró, and Dalí all feature prominently. The institution also pursues a robust programme of temporary exhibitions and holds extensive archives of 20th-century Spanish cultural life.

History

The core building was designed by Francesco Sabatini and constructed between 1788 and 1805 as the General Hospital of Madrid. After the hospital closed, the Spanish government began converting the building for cultural use in the 1970s; it opened as an exhibition space in 1986 and became a museum in 1990, receiving national status in 1992 when it was named in honour of Queen Sofía. Architect Jean Nouvel designed a major extension — a red-tiled roof structure known as the Nouvel Building — completed in 2005, adding galleries, a library, and an auditorium.

What you see

Guernica, Picasso’s monumental 1937 protest painting against the Nazi bombing of the Basque town, occupies a dedicated room on the second floor and draws hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. The permanent collection is spread across two main buildings and organised thematically and chronologically, moving through early 20th-century Cubism and abstraction, the Spanish Civil War and its artistic responses, mid-century international movements, and art from the late 20th century to the present. The exterior glass lift towers added to the Sabatini building are a well-known Madrid landmark.

Cultural significance

The Reina Sofía is one of the most visited museums in Europe and a mandatory point of reference for the history of 20th-century Western art. Its custody of Guernica — returned to Spain from New York’s MoMA in 1981 following the restoration of democracy — carries profound political symbolism. Together with the Prado and the Thyssen-Bornemisza, the museum places Madrid among the continent’s great art capitals.

Practical information

Address: Calle de Santa Isabel 52, 28012 Madrid. Open Monday and Wednesday–Saturday 10:00–21:00; Sunday 10:00–14:30; closed Tuesday. General admission applies; free entry Monday and Wednesday–Saturday from 19:00–21:00, and Sunday 10:00–14:30. Check the official website (museoreinasofia.es) for current prices and booking requirements.

Getting there

Metro: Atocha Renfe (Line 1, light blue) or Estación del Arte (Line 1). The museum entrance is on Calle de Santa Isabel, a 3-minute walk from the Atocha railway terminal. Multiple bus lines (14, 27, 34, 37, 45) stop nearby. By train from anywhere in Spain: arrive at Atocha station, then walk 5 minutes.

Sources & resources

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