The Magritte Museum, inaugurated on June 2, 2009, occupies the Hotel Altenloh — a neoclassical 18th-century mansion on the Place Royale in the heart of Brussels — and forms part of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium complex. Dedicated entirely to René Magritte (1898–1967), the Belgian painter who became one of Surrealism's defining voices, the museum holds the world's largest collection of his works: over 200 original paintings, drawings, gouaches, sculptures, and archival objects spanning all five decades of his career. Magritte himself lived in Brussels for most of his adult life, working from an unassuming terraced house in the Jette district, and the city's bourgeois quietude permeates much of the unsettling domesticity in his canvases.
The collection is organized across five floors and three thematic periods. The ground floor introduces Magritte's early commercial work — advertising posters and wallpaper designs from the 1920s that funded his fine art practice — before ascending into the fully realized Surrealist vocabulary that brought him international recognition. Centerpiece works include The Dominion of Light (a series begun in 1948 depicting a daylit sky over a nocturnal street, which sold at auction in 2022 for £59.4 million), The Treachery of Images study works, and numerous versions of the bowler-hatted anonymous man that became his signature motif. The top floor is dedicated to his final period and includes rarely exhibited sketches and correspondence with André Breton and other Surrealist contemporaries.
Visitors move through rooms that deliberately resist chronological rigidity, instead grouping works by recurring themes — duality of day and night, concealment of the human face, the tension between language and image. This curatorial approach mirrors Magritte's own insistence that his paintings were not puzzles to be solved but questions to be lived with. Audio guides (available in eight languages) quote extensively from Magritte's own essays and letters, giving the experience an unusual biographical density. An on-site research library holds over 4,000 documents including original correspondence and film footage of the artist at work.
The museum is open Tuesday through Sunday, 10:00–17:00, with extended hours until 20:00 on the first Wednesday evening of each month. It is closed on Mondays and on January 1, the first Thursday of January, May 1, November 1, and December 25. Tickets cost €10 for adults, with reductions for seniors, students, and children; a combined ticket covering all five Royal Museums of Fine Arts buildings is available for €15 and represents excellent value. The Place Royale entrance is a short walk from the Brussels Central and Brussels-Luxembourg train stations, and the museum is fully wheelchair accessible via a dedicated entrance on Rue du Musée.