Van Gogh Museum
More than 200 of his paintings hang here in the order he made them, so you watch the dark early Dutch scenes give way to the bright, loaded canvases of his last years in France. No other place comes close to this much Van Gogh, plus the drawings and the letters to his brother Theo. It sits on Museumplein, next to the Rijksmuseum.
Photos: Jan Tito from Dordrecht, Nederland (Netherlands) (CC BY-SA 2.0), – Wladyslaw [Disk.] (CC BY-SA 3.0), Sebastian Koppehel (CC BY 4.0), via Wikimedia Commons
One artist, one building, seen in the order he painted it: his story lands harder here than a few canvases scattered across a bigger museum ever manage. Just do not turn up without a ticket, because they only sell online.
Worth it for
- Anyone pulled in by Van Gogh and the fast arc of how his painting changed
- Visitors who would rather go deep on one artist than wide across a big collection
You can skip if
- You did not book ahead, since there are no door sales and slots go
- You want range across many painters rather than one of them in depth
Tickets & tours for Van Gogh Museum
Which ticket should you buy?
What you will see
The collection is arranged to follow Van Gogh's life chronologically, which makes the change in his work easy to read. You start with somber early pieces like The Potato Eaters, then watch his palette open up after he moved to Paris and later to the south of France.
Famous canvases here include Sunflowers, The Bedroom, Almond Blossom, and Wheatfield with Crows. Because so much hangs in one place, you can see how fast his style developed across just a decade. The museum also draws on the letters between Vincent and his brother Theo, which add context that few other artists' collections can match.
More than Van Gogh
The museum sets Van Gogh among his contemporaries, with works by artists who influenced him or moved in the same circles, including Gauguin, Monet, and other 19th-century painters. This helps explain where his ideas came from rather than treating him in isolation.
A separate exhibition wing, added in the 1990s, hosts rotating shows that dig into specific themes, periods, or relationships. These change through the year and are included with standard admission, so it is worth checking what is on when you book.
The buildings
The main building was designed by Gerrit Rietveld, a figure from the De Stijl movement, and opened in 1973. Its clean, open floors give the paintings room to breathe.
The curved glass exhibition wing was designed by Japanese architect Kisho Kurokawa and opened in 1999, with a later entrance hall added to handle the crowds. The two structures together let the museum separate the permanent collection from temporary shows, which keeps the main route clear.
Planning your visit
This is one of the most visited museums in the Netherlands, and it manages demand strictly. Tickets are timed and sold online only. There is no ticket desk at the door, so do not turn up expecting to buy on the spot. Book a date and time slot in advance, and book early for summer and weekends.
Most visitors spend around two hours here, which is enough to follow the full chronology without rushing. Late afternoon Friday slots are worth a look when the museum stays open into the evening, since the building is calmer then.
Van Gogh Museum: FAQs
No. Tickets are sold online only, with no sales at the entrance. You must pre-book a date and timed entry slot before you arrive.
About two hours is typical and lets you follow the full chronological route without rushing. Add time if there is a special exhibition you want to see.
It is right next door on Museumplein, a few minutes' walk. Many people pair the two, though doing both in one day is a lot of art.
Highlights include Sunflowers, The Bedroom, Almond Blossom, The Potato Eaters, and Wheatfield with Crows, alongside many drawings and letters.
Yes, the rotating shows in the exhibition wing are included with standard admission. Check what is running when you book, as they change through the year.
Early slots right after opening and the Friday late-evening hours tend to be the calmest. Midday weekends are the busiest.
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