May 3, 2017 1 min to read

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía

Category : Travel

We decided to go to museums after the journey to Cáceres, Lisbon and Porto, so first we picked Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Spain’s national museum of 20th-century art. When you come the entrance, you see a sign that looks like this:

and a thing (i don’t know what it is supposed to be) that looks like this:

We come into the museum and I find out from Mom that in the museum is Pablo Picasso’s most famous picture: Guernica. It is pretty long and is really weird (seriously!). We aren’t allowed to take pictures over there, so I can’t show you how it looks. There were a lot of other pictures (al(l)so weird). There were also some Salvador Dali paintings, which were more insanely weird than any picture in the museum. We also saw the copy of an old metronome called Indestructible Object, made by Man Ray, an american artist.

There was a room that had a forest of metal balls hanging from strings of yarn. It looked nice. There was another room that had a glass clawed foot shooting from the ceiling. After that we came into a room that had things in the wall that looked like there were people inside it that were trying to get out. It looked like this:

Plain weird.

We decided to go to the garden in the middle in the middle of the museum, so we went and found out that there are a lot of yummy wild strawberries over there and ate some (maybe “some” is an understatement) and went to the 3rd floor after that. It turned out to be a corridor with paintings from 2 artists and their students. I don’t remember the names of the artists. But what I remember is that the paintings were nice.

We came down to the bottom floor and left the museum. See ya, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía!

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