For art lovers, there is a museum in
downtown San José that you won't want to miss. Unique in its history, it used to be the terminal of Costa Rica’s old international airport, at the east end of where
Sabana Park
is today.


Costa Rican Art Museum in downtown San Jose

The
Costa Rican Art Museum (Museo de Arte Costarricense)is housed in a beautiful Neoclassical-style building built in the late 1930s. The gorgeous building, a work of art in itself, stages a permanent display of 3,200 national treasures in all media by Costa Rica’s most celebrated artists from the past two centuries. Temporary exhibits fill side galleries, and in the back garden are sculptures with works by Francisco Zuñiga, Jorge Jiménez, Max Jiménez, Edgar Zuñiga and José Sancho.

Costa Rica has a laudable tradition of turning unlikely buildings into museums. Case in point, the
Costa Rican Art Museum
was once the principal airport terminal. The
Children’s Museum
was a prison. The
National Museum
was an old fort that even has bullet holes from the 1948 Civil War, and the
Contemporary Art Museum
is located in what used to be the National Liquor Factory.

Costa Rica's first airport terminal at La Sabana

The
Costa Rican Art Museum
served as the international airport terminal from 1940
until 1955, when the airport moved out to Alajuela and the area was turned into La Sabana Park. Originally designed by architect Jose Maria Barrantes Monge in 1937, it opened as a museum in April 1978; the Sculpture Garden was added in 2003.

Costa Rican Art Museum features national artists

Today, the museum displays exceptionally beautiful pieces in a wide range of styles – paintings, printmaking, watercolors, drawings, sculptures and photography. There is a featured collection of more than 4,000 drawings and sculptures by famous Costa Rican artist
Juan Manuel Sanchez. Plus, you can see more than 560 permanent international works by leading artists from around the world.

Costa Rican Art Museum bronze mural in the Golden Room

One gem not to be missed is the
Golden Room, remarkable for its beauty and detail. The room used to be the arrival area for visiting foreign diplomats. Its walls are adorned with a bas-relief in stucco, carved and painted bronze, by French sculptor and goldsmith, Luis Féron Parizot. The 1940 mural summarizes the history of Costa Rica from Pre-Columbian times to the 1940s.

The Costa Rican Art Museum is
open Tuesday to Sunday from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm. Admission is free! You can easily spend an hour or two discovering its art treasures. From there, spend a pleasant afternoon walking the lush grounds of
Sabana Park
or visit another of San Jose’s cultural attractions.

For a small country, Costa Rica offers a large number of museums, dedicated to everything from Pre-Columbian jewelry made of gold and jade, to art in all media, to natural taxidermy collections and bizarre criminology displays. All of the main museums are in the
downtown San Jose area
or very close to it, and can be accessed easily by bus or taxi.


Hotel Ritzli

Your “home away from home” in the center of downtown San Jose is
Hotel Ritzli. This clean, comfortable, affordable and charming European-style guesthouse offers one of the
best locations for seeing the metropolitan area. Hotel Ritzli is positioned only 2 blocks away from the Cathedral and Central Park, where the city’s main cultural centers converge.

By Shannon

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