We visited this museum twice as we could not see everything inside accompanied by our 20 months old. The museum is baby-friendly, which means you can use your own stroller/pram however you also have the possibility to borrow one from the museum. By the way all of them are Stokke! :) You will throughout Scandinavia, most of the museums will not allow you to enter with a stroller and make you use theirs and generally their offer is TOO basic.
The museum has 80 rooms, covering a historical span of almost 3000 years with over 6500 works…
I really liked this museum because many rooms had also activities for kids ands toddlers. It makes it possible to really tour the whole museum when you can keep your toddler busy with the offers. We entered the museum with an Oslo Card and you can make multiple entries which is again a big deal when you have a toddler. We saw the whole collection in two different days.














/1849












You can see one of the acitivities I mentioned here on the right hand side, another one here:
















Paul Gauguin,1889




– Édouard Manet, 1861









– Christian Krohg, 1889

Sigrid Bølling, 1888







– Erik Werenskiold, 1883


Breakfast II. The Artist’s Family –
Gustav Wentzel, 1885
The National Museum of Art, Architecture and Design, Norway
Oslo, Norway





So the most well-known artworks from Edvard Munch are to be found in Room 60.




















– Oda Krohg, 1886











– Amedeo Modigliani, 1918

– Hanna Pauli, 1896

– Theodor Kittelsen, 1897


– Henri Matisse, 1908











Sofie Werenskiold
Erik Werenskiold, 1904

























