Updated September 8, 2010

The official Montreal museums website gives details on the three-day Montreal museum pass and this year's museum theme, City of Glass.

Our major museums are:

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
Musée d'art contemporain
Canadian Centre for Architecture

Also see our historical museums page

Musées de Montréal's photos of the 35 museums in Montreal

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts

1379-1380 Sherbrooke West – 514-285-1600
Metro Guy-Concordia or Bus 24
Official websiteWikipedia page

The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal) is the grande dame of the Canadian museum world. Founded in 1860, the original pavilion, shown above at left – now known as the Michal and Renata Hornstein Pavilion – dates from 1912, and the Jean-Noël Desmarais pavilion, facing it across Sherbrooke St., a Moshe Safdie design, from 1991. The pavilions are connected by an underground passage. A new pavilion is currently being constructed inside the old Erskine and American Church which adjoins the museum.

The museum has a large collection of decorative and ethnographic objects, 19th-century paintings, and Canadian paintings, prints and drawings, only a small fraction of which can be displayed at a time. It also hosts major travelling shows.

The major upcoming exhibition, opening September 24, is a retrospective of the work of Otto Dix.

Café and boutique on the premises.

Admission to the permanent displays is free.

Musée d'art contemporain

185 Ste-Catherine West – 514-847-6626
Metro Place-des-Arts or Bus 15, 80/535, 129
Official websiteWikipedia pageWikipedia page (French)

Montreal's modern art museum, the Musée d'art contemporain, once housed in Cité du Havre, acquired its permanent home by Place des Arts at Jeanne-Mance and Ste-Catherine in 1992. Specializing in works dating from 1940 onwards, the museum hosts shows in all media used by contemporary artists. Admission is $8; Wednesday evenings are free.

Current exhibits: Borduas: Les frontières de nos rêves ne sont plus les mêmes, till October 3. Wikipedia on Borduas and his importance in Quebec's sociocultural history.

With glass, under glass, without glass till October 3

There's an art bookstore in the basement and a café on the premises.

The museum is now also part of the Quartier des spectacles.

Canadian Centre for Architecture

1920 Baile Street – 514-939-7026
Metro Guy-Concordia or Bus 150
Official websiteWikipedia page

The Centre canadien de l'architecture opened in 1989. An interestingly schizoid building, the façade facing René-Lévesque is the grand old Shaughnessy mansion, which came very close to demolition before the museum plan saved it; the façade facing Baile Street (one of downtown's most modest thoroughfares), shown above, is as aloof as modern architecture can be.

It's worth exploring the exterior of the building as part of your visit: the Shaughnessy façade is partially mirrored across René-Lévesque by a spooky sculpture which leads to an entirely surreal sculpture garden with a view over the Ville-Marie Expressway of the lower parts of town.

The CCA is not only a museum that presents exhibits related to architecture, but also a major study centre for the discipline. It also has a bookstore that will tempt anyone with an interest in the design arts, and there are lectures, movie screenings and other events. Adult admission is $10 and Thursday evenings are free.