Il y a des arts artisanaux de partout dans le monde. Il y a des peintures Hogaz, des sculptures grecques, vous pouvez imaginer, il y a là. Tout est dans cette magnifique œuvre de maîtrise de l'architecture. Le personnel est amical et aimable de partager leurs connaissances.
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Il y a des arts artisanaux de partout dans le monde. Il y a des peintures Hogaz, des sculptures grecques, vous pouvez imaginer, il y a là. Tout est dans cette magnifique œuvre de maîtrise de l'architecture. Le personnel est amical et aimable de partager leurs connaissances.
The Sir John & Thorn Museum is located in a beautiful square with a public garden. The tour guide has a comprehensive understanding of the doctor's research topics and many other aspects of Egyptology. He can walk for no more than five minutes from the central line of the Holland Railway Station.
The basement tour of Sir John Thorn Museum is like traveling through the future, using light extraordinarily. The upstairs is more like a traditional gallery with stone sculptures from all over the world, including the sarcophagus of the King of Egypt, set up as it was 200 years ago.
Vérifiez les heures d'ouverture parce qu'elles sont un peu inhabituelles mais une bijoux cachés au centre de Londres.
this was our first destination in London, an excellent little house museum with a wonderfully well-preserved interior and impressive art collection. not to be missed!
It's hard to describe how amazing and quirky this museum truly is. Soane was an architect and avid collector and his home is like entering a bit of Wonderland. Rooms where the walls move and hallways are covered in antiquities, stained glass windows and statues. You find yourself completely overwhelmed visually. Definitely stay for the presentation in the painting room on the Hogarths as it is well worth it. Free but there's a queue outside usually so come early.
One of the best kept secrets in London. Fantastic little art museum with Hogarth's 'Rake's Progress' cycle and a terrific collection of art and architecture of Greece. Soane was an eccentric to be sure, but there was something 'very' English about his love affair with the Mediterranean.
you leave the quiet space of Lincoln's Inn towards its northern entry and find yourself in a small place stuffed with a collection of antique statues and items thouroughly put together by an expert. The pure sight of the magnificent work that has been done thrills you and maybe you want to become an archeologist