Public Television Museum

A tribute to Canal 7, Argentina's first television channel.

Closed until December 2020.

This museum pays tribute to Canal 7, Argentina's first television channel - also the first channel to broadcast in colour and the first to switch to digital. The museum features famous broadcasts as well as unbroadcast footage, and the permanent collection includes the first television camera that arrived in Argentina in 1951. The central hall hosts exhibitions by up-and-coming artists.

See more attractions in Recoleta.

 

FIGUEROA ALCORTA, PRES. AV. 2977

Museo del Humor (humour museum)

Discover works by the best Argentine caricaturists and comic illustrators in a landmark historic building.

Museo Histórico Nacional

Promotes reflection on Argentine identity and the many historic processes that led to the country’s formation.

Museo Histórico Sarmiento

Museum that briefly housed Argentina's national government.

Museo Mundial del Tango (world tango museum)

Museum dedicated to Buenos Aires' native dance, also housing the National Academy of Tango.

Pablo Ducrós Hicken Cinema Museum

Film museum built from the personal collection of Argentina painter Ducrós Hicken.

Palais de Glace - National Palace of the Arts

Inaugurated in 1910, this palace of art originally housed an ice rink

Participative Science Museum

A great museum for kids to get hands-on with science.

Quinquela Martín Museum of Fine Arts

Explore the legacy of La Boca's most celebrated artist

Raul Scalabrini Ortíz National Railway Museum

Explore the history of Argentina's railways.

River Plate Museum

River Plate has one of the world's largest sports museums.

Rogelio Yrurtia House Museum

Home and workshop of the great Argentine sculptor Rogelio Yrurtia.

The Franciscan Convent Museum

Museum narrating the history of the Franciscan order and its role in evangelisation.