Magritte Museum in Brussels
Europe

Magritte Museum

Brussels · Belgium · Founded 2009

The world's largest collection dedicated to René Magritte — 230 original works by Belgium's most famous surrealist painter, housed in a neoclassical palace on Place Royale.

About Magritte Museum

The Magritte Museum opened in 2009 in the neoclassical Hôtel Altenloh on Place Royale, adjacent to the Royal Museums of Fine Arts. It holds the world's largest collection of works by René Magritte (1898–1967), the Belgian surrealist painter whose image-language subversions — including The Treachery of Images ('Ceci n'est pas une pipe') and The Son of Man — became among the most reproduced images of the 20th century.

The three-floor museum presents approximately 230 original works across all periods of Magritte's career: his early commercial work and Impressionist phase, the surrealist breakthrough of the 1920s and 30s, and the mature Renoir Period and final masterworks. Personal letters, photographs, and film footage contextualise the life and method of one of art history's most cerebral painters.

Collections & Highlights

The largest Magritte collection in the world — 230 original works
The Treachery of Images ('Ceci n'est pas une pipe') — the original and its context
The Son of Man, Golconda, The Human Condition, and other iconic surrealist works
Personal archive: letters, photographs, and home films by Magritte himself

Frequently Asked Questions

A small ask before you go

You've just explored one of humanity's greatest collections of beauty. Art has the power to move us, inspire us, and change how we see the world. But millions of people will never see beauty like this — not because the art isn't there, but because they can't see at all.

Preventable blindness, caused by conditions like cataracts and trachoma, affects people of all ages across the world's poorest communities. A small gift — for the cost of a museum ticket — can provide a simple surgery to restore someone's sight and transform their life.