
The story
Most people meet this museum from the bottom of its steps, running up all 72 of them with their arms over their heads, because that is what Rocky Balboa did in the 1976 film and visitors have copied him ever since. A bronze Rocky stands beside the stairs to prove it. What they are running toward is a building shaped like a Greek temple, opened in 1928 on a rise at the end of the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, its pediments picked out in blue, red and gold the way an ancient one would have been.
Inside, past the armor and the transplanted period rooms, is one of the reasons art historians come: the largest collection of Marcel Duchamp anywhere. Walter and Louise Arensberg, collectors who knew Duchamp personally, left the museum their holdings around 1950, and with them came 'Nude Descending a Staircase', the figure broken into overlapping slices of motion that scandalized New York in 1913.
In a small room off to the side sits his last work, 'Étant donnés', which you can only see by looking through two peepholes in an old wooden door. Duchamp built it in secret over 20 years and left instructions that it be assembled only after his death, which is how it reached Philadelphia in 1969.
Collection
40 works
Saint ChristopherAnonymous, 1450
The Burning of the Houses of Lords and CommonsJ. M. W. Turner, 1834
Afternoon Sunshine, Pont NeufCamille Pissarro, 1901
A Lady Playing the GuitarAnonymous, 1670
Girl in a Red RuffPierre-Auguste Renoir, 1896
Head of ChristRembrandt, 1648
Portrait of Camille RoulinVincent van Gogh, 1888
Portrait of Frances Sherborne Ridley WattsJohn Singer Sargent, 1877
Portrait of Madame RenoirPierre-Auguste Renoir, 1885
Portrait of Mademoiselle LegrandPierre-Auguste Renoir, 1875
The Ballet ClassEdgar Degas, 1878
The Last Moments of Saint Mary MagdaleneSandro Botticelli, 1491
The Seesaw (1791)Francisco Goya, 1791
Woman in BlueHenri Matisse, 1937
Under the Pines, EveningClaude Monet, 1888