Kunstmuseum Den Haag, Art museum in The Hague, Netherlands
Kunstmuseum Den Haag displays paintings, sculptures and applied arts in a multi-story building from the 1930s. The halls are connected by long corridors illuminated through skylights.
The building was erected in the 1930s when the city planned new public structures along wide avenues. The collection grew significantly after World War II through donations and acquisitions.
The name honors the city that has been home to government and royal court for centuries. Today visitors come primarily for the Mondrian works, whose abstract compositions appear in many rooms.
The venue opens in the morning and closes in the early evening most days of the week except Mondays. Part of the building is accessible to wheelchair users, though not all floors can be reached without barriers.
The collection holds around 300 works by Mondrian, more than any other venue worldwide. These pieces trace his evolution from representational landscapes to the familiar geometric grids.
The community of curious travelers
AroundUs brings together thousands of curated places, local tips, and hidden gems, enriched daily by 60,000 contributors worldwide.