
Duration
45 minutes
Best Time
Any time
Price
€
Closures
Closed on Monday
Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano offers something rare in Milan - the chance to see how wealthy collectors actually lived with serious contemporary art. Antonio Boschi and Marieda Di Stefano transformed their elegant 1930s apartment into a showcase for 300 works by Italy's modern masters, including de Chirico's surreal landscapes, Fontana's slashed canvases, and Morandi's contemplative still lifes. You're walking through their actual home, with paintings hanging exactly where the couple placed them for daily enjoyment.
The experience feels like visiting sophisticated friends who happen to own museum-quality art. You'll move through period rooms where rationalist furniture sits beneath avant-garde paintings, creating conversations between different artistic movements. The intimate scale means you can study each work closely - Sironi's urban scenes, Campigli's mysterious figures, and rare pieces by artists you've likely never heard of but should know. Nothing feels sterile or overly curated.
Most art guides barely mention this place, which works in your favor since it's completely free and genuinely uncrowded. The volunteer guides are passionate and speak decent English, though you can easily appreciate everything on your own. Skip the small temporary exhibitions - the permanent collection in the original apartment layout is the real draw here.
Ring the doorbell at street level and take the elevator to the fourth floor - there's no obvious museum entrance and many people walk past confused
The bedroom and study contain some of the most intimate pieces that most visitors rush through - spend time with Morandi's bottles in the bedroom
Visit on weekday afternoons when you'll often have entire rooms to yourself, and don't miss the small balcony with original 1930s details
Skip the queue: Book tickets online to avoid the ticket line.
Plan for about 45 minutes.
Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano is in the Porta Venezia neighborhood of Milan. The address is Via Giorgio Jan, 15, 20129 Milano MI, Italy. The area is well-served by metro.
This works well at any time of day, though mornings tend to be quieter. Weekdays are less crowded than weekends.
Closed on Monday. Check the official website for holiday closures and special hours.
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