Sunday
Museum of Barbarism - Nicosia, Northern Cyprus
National Struggle Museum - Nicosia, Cyprus
Cyprus Archaeological Museum - Nicosia, Cyprus
Outside: just go inside, the building erected in 1883 is in need of renovation.
Inside: The collection is remarkable. Highlights include a display of terracotta figures from the 7-6 century B.C., coming from a castle in Northern Cyprus. Look out for the three limestone lions and two sphinxes found in Tamassos necropolis, which show a definite Egyptian influence and were discovered only in 1997. You can also see the famous statue Aphrodite of Soli, which is featured on tourist posters and on the 5 pound banknote. An enormous bronze statue of the Emperor Septimus Severus can hardly be overlooked. The rest is an abundant and impressive, but quite boring, exhibits of bowls, craters, and statuettes from Cyprus' archaeological past. A unique feature of the museum lies in the basement, where several graves rest in a dark cellar complete with skeletal remains and grave adornments that have been reconstructed. (Last visit 07/2002)
Museum Nejjarine Museum of Wood Arts and Crafts - Fez, Morocco
Guggenheim Bilbao - Bilbao, Spain

Outside: Spend your time walking around the building, first from a certain distance, and then right under it to capture the details of every curve and shape. Completed in 1997, the building is an extraordinary combination of interconnecting shapes. Orthogonal blocks in limestone contrast with the curved forms covered in titanium. Glass walls provide the building with the light it needs. The half-millimetre thick "fish-scale" titanium panels that cover the building reflect light and water in different ways and colors over the course of each day's 24 hours. It seems impossible that the building actually stands, being so sinuous and contorted. It is amazing! The museum was featured at the beginning of the James Bond movie "The World is Not Enough" with Pierce Brosnan.

Inside: Again, it is the building you really want to admire once inside. Curved white walls and steel and glass windows form a post-modern cathedral with huge spaces for art installations. The permanent collection is fine, if you haven't seen any of the other Guggenheim museums. There are works by de Kooning, Rosenquist, Rothko, Serra, Warhol and many other contemporary and avant-guarde artists, in particular Basque and Spanish artists. When I went, there was an interesting exhibition of Giorgio Armani's sartorial creations. (last visit 05/2000)
British Museum - London, UK
Outside: The origins of the British Museum
Before beginning to visit the collection, you should go inside the Reading Room, at the center of the Great Court. Using cast iron, concrete, glass and the latest heating and ventilation systems, it was a masterpiece of mid-nineteenth century technology. The bookshelves surrounding it were also made of iron to take the great weight of the books and protect them against fire. In all, the library containes three miles (4.8 kilometres) of bookcases and twenty-five miles (forty kilometres) of shelves. It opened on 2 May 1857 and for more than 100 years the Reading Room was a centre of learning. Among those who spent time in the room were Karl Marx, Lenin, Bram Stoker, and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Inside: Start with the King’s Library, at the right of the Great Court. This is not necessarily the most interesting part of the museum, but you can see how the British Museum looked in the 1800s. Built between 1823 and 1827, restoration work between 2000 and 2003 revived the room to its original glory. You can admire the oak and mahogany floor and classical architectural features, with the yellow and gold ornamentation and the re-gilded balcony. Thousands of objects from the Museum collection are crammed in huge wood cabinets, as it was in use in the Age of Enlightenment.
Then go for the highlights: the Rosetta Stone at the entrance of the Egyptian Hall (room 4), the Parthenon sculptures (room 18, awesome!), the sculptures from the Mausoleum of Halikarnassos (room 21), the Oxus Treasure from ancient Iran (room 52) and the beautiful Assyrian carvings and statues (room 6-10). The Asia rooms hold the richest collections of Chinese art in Europe (room 33). Room 34 has some of the finest Islamic pottery, while the Korean Gallery features a full scale scholar's house, which you can only see in Korean museums (room 67). The Aztec selection is phenomenal, with the famous turquoise mosaic mask of the god Tezcatlipoca (room 27).
I find the Africa section one of the best in the world (room 25). Look for the brass plaques from Benin. When they came to Europe at the end of the 1800s, people believed the plaques to be fake because they thought impossible for Africa to produce such beautiful artifacts (!). The Medieval Britain section features the famous 2000-year-old bog body known as the Lindow man (room 50), while in room 41 you can see the Medieval Sutton Hoo Ship Burial. And of course don't miss the vast collection of Egyptian and Sudanese objects (a lot of mummies in room 62 and 63!), and the Greek and Roman art in rooms 11-23. (Last visit 07/2008)
Jardin Majorelle - Marrakesh, Morocco


Inside: the blue house built in 1931 by the architect Paul Sinoir shelters the Islamic Art Museum, the personal collection of Pierre Bergé and Yves Saint Laurent. It presents objects of Islamic art coming from the Maghreb, the Orient, Africa and Asia. It is an extraordinary collection with ceramics and potteries of a great value, weapons and magnificent jewelry, textiles, carpets, woodworks (the wood doors are amazing) and other treasures. A space is also devoted to the works of Jacques Majorelle. (Last visited 05/2001)