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Legion of Honor

The Legion of Honor is located at 100 34th Ave, San Francisco, CA 94121. The museum was established in 1924 as a gift from Alma de Bretteville Spreckels to the city. The museum is housed in a Beaux-Arts building designed by George Applegarth, modeled after the Palais de la Légion d’Honneur in Paris. The Legion of Honor’s collection includes European art from the Middle Ages to the 20th century, with notable works by artists such as El Greco, Rubens and Claude Monet. The museum also features an impressive collection of ancient art from the Mediterranean basin and a significant holding of works on paper, including prints and drawings by artists like Rembrandt and Albrecht Dürer. The Legion of Honor hosts exhibitions such as “Last Supper in Pompeii” and “Leonardo da Vinci: A Life in Drawing.” The museum offers educational programs, lectures, and performances, enhancing public engagement with its diverse collection. Read more about Museums.

A painting shows two women in white dresses and a man in a dark suit standing on a green balcony, with one woman leaning on the railing, another holding a closed green umbrella, the man behind them smoking, and a small dog at their feet inside a shadowy interior framed by green shutters.

One Fine Show: ‘Manet & Morisot’ at the Legion of Honor

The exhibition invites viewers to look past old binaries of muse and master and toward a more reciprocal artistic exchange.
By Dan Duray
A painting of five formally dressed individuals, three men and two women, seated on mismatched chairs in close proximity, facing different directions with blank or tense expressions, against a flat, dark blue background and white floor.

One Fine Show: “Wayne Thiebaud, Art Comes from Art” at the Legion of Honor

The late painter’s figures are stiff, strange and quietly psychedelic.
By Dan Duray
A woman wearing yellow with brown hair poses for the camera with her chin resting on her fist

Katy Hessel Talks About Putting Women Artists Front and Center at Five Major Museums

"There’s nothing inherently different about art created by a different gender; it's more that gatekeepers have prioritized one group in history."
By Sarah Moroz
The Museum of Modern Art in New York City.

How Museums Are Diversifying to Attract New Audiences in the Post-Pandemic Era

By Daniel Grant
Painting of Adobe style building against blue sky

Bernard and Barbro Osher Pledge Their Art Collection to San Francisco Museums

By Alexandra Tremayne-Pengelly
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