
1001
Washington Avenue
Miami Beach, FL
(305) 531-1001
Hours:
11am
to 6pm Monday,
Tuesday, Friday and Saturday; and from 11am to 9pm Thursday.
Noon to 5pm on
Sunday and closed Wednesday.
Admission:
$5 for adults, $3.50 for seniors, students and
children ages 6 to 12. Hint:
Save a few bucks. Admission to The Wolfsonian is
free from 6 to 9 p.m. Thursdays.
Miami
business magnate Mitchell Wolfson Jr.’s remarkable
70,000-item collection of American and European fine
and decorative art works and crafts from the late 19th
to early 20th century gives Miami Beach
an outstanding and unique museum, a cultural oasis
of international importance.
Founded
in 1986, The Wolfsonian now is housed in a 1927
Mediterranean-Revival building designed by Edwin
Robinson and Lawrence Patterson, which had fallen
into use as a storage warehouse. The building was
enlarged to its current seven floors and refurbished
to its original splendor by architect Mark Hampton
in 1992. The Wolfsonian has been a division by
Florida International University, the regional state
university, since 1997.
The
Wolfsonian’s principal focus is American and
European cultural history from the late 19th
and early 20th centuries. Its mission is
to show how art and design have evolved and adapted
to contemporary society and culture and how design
and the visual arts reflect the human experience.
The museum offers exhibits, lectures, films,
performances and a considerable outreach program
with schools and colleges in the community. The
Wolfsonian aspires to be one of America’s great
museums and a center of art research and study. It
has made a phenomenal start in its relatively short
history.
The
best local parking is in the municipal lot at
Collins Avenue and 12th Street. Cost is
$6. Miami Beach’s Electrowave shuttle service
stops in front of The Wolfsonian. Cost is 25 cents.