The Vatican Museums are not a place you can fully see in one visit. Each time you return, you notice different details and often follow a different route, depending on what draws your attention. It is less about seeing everything and more about moving through the space and choosing what to focus on. This post reflects that kind of experience rather than trying to describe the museums as a whole.
Musei Vaticani | Musées du Vatican | Vatikanische Museen | Museos Vaticanos | Musei Vaticani | Musea Vaticana | Muzea Watykańskie | 梵蒂冈博物馆 | バチカン美術館 | 바티칸 미술관
It is difficult to recall all of them, not to mention describing or even photographing each one. It would simply be too much. In practice, this is not a place that can be fully grasped in a single visit – at some point, one has to accept a certain level of selectivity. In fact, each time you return, you can focus on something different and follow an entirely different route. This place is the Vatican Museums – or rather, a vast ensemble of palaces, wings, halls, and chambers that are almost impossible to fully comprehend once you are inside.
The foundation of the Vatican Museums was laid by Pope Julius II in 1506, and, as is often the case in Rome, the story begins with a discovery. The famous Laocoön statue – a monumental ancient sculpture depicting the Trojan priest Laocoön and his sons struggling with sea serpents – was unearthed in a vineyard near the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore. Recognising its immense artistic and historical value, the Pope acquired the sculpture and placed it in the Vatican. This moment is generally seen as the beginning of what would gradually become one of the most important art collections in the world.
Over the following centuries, successive popes continued to expand the collection through conquests, donations, and acquisitions. What began with a single sculpture evolved into a vast and complex ensemble, encompassing not only classical works, but also Renaissance painting, Egyptian artefacts, Etruscan objects, and many other categories. Today, the Vatican Museums are particularly renowned for their exceptional collection of Roman sculpture, widely regarded as one of the most significant of its kind.
One of the defining moments in the history of the Vatican complex was the decoration of the Sistine Chapel ceiling by Michelangelo. Commissioned by Pope Julius II and completed between 1508 and 1512, the frescoes are considered a masterpiece of High Renaissance art and remain one of the most recognisable works in the history of Western art.
In the 18th century, Pope Clement XIV and Pope Pius VI founded the Museo Pio-Clementino, focusing primarily on classical sculpture. This marked a period of significant expansion, which continued into the early 19th century under Pope Pius VII with the creation of the Chiaramonti Museum and the Braccio Nuovo gallery. These developments formed part of a broader effort not only to preserve, but also to organise and present the growing collection in a more coherent way.
Today, the Musei Vaticani consist not of a single museum, but of a complex network of interconnected collections and spaces, each dedicated to a specific type of art or historical period. Among them are the Picture Gallery, the Raphael Rooms, the Etruscan Museum, the Egyptian Museum, and the Ethnological Museum. The complex also includes the Vatican Library and the Vatican Secret Archives, which preserve some of the most important historical documents and manuscripts in existence.
When visiting the Vatican Museums, one is immediately confronted with the question of route. The experience is less about moving freely between galleries and more about following a structured, largely one-directional path through the complex. There are several possible routes, often beginning with the section devoted to antiquities. This part of the museum is dominated by sculptures, busts, reliefs, mosaics, and other ancient artefacts, while paintings are relatively rare – a balance that is more than compensated for later. The atmosphere here is distinctly ancient, almost archaeological, encouraging a slower, more attentive way of looking.
As one moves further through the complex, the emphasis gradually shifts from archaeology towards painting, frescoes, and artistic craftsmanship. Some rooms resemble traditional galleries, where the paintings themselves take centre stage. In others, however, it becomes necessary to look not only around, but also upwards.
Among the most remarkable spaces are the Raphael Rooms, a suite of chambers decorated by Raphael himself, where painting and architecture merge into a carefully constructed visual programme. They are considered one of the most important surviving examples of High Renaissance interior decoration, comparable in significance – though very different in character – to the Sistine Chapel.
Equally striking are the long corridors that structure the movement through the museums – some extending for several hundred metres – with ceilings richly covered in frescoes. One of these is known for its Gallery of Maps, a sixteenth-century visual representation of the Italian peninsula that reflects not only geography, but also the political and cultural perspective of its time. Another forms part of the passages within the Vatican Library. Walking through one of these side corridors, with frescoes covering both walls and ceilings, takes nearly ten minutes at a steady pace. It is one of the possible exit routes from the museum – but by no means the only one.
A visit to the Vatican Museums also means accepting a certain level of intensity. There are hundreds of visitors each day, all moving through the same spaces, often at the same pace. This inevitably shapes the experience, making it at times less contemplative than one might expect from such a place. At the same time, it creates a very particular rhythm of visiting – one that is less about lingering and more about moving, observing, and selecting what truly captures your attention.
A SELECTION OF MY PHOTO IMPRESSIONS: MUSEI VATICANI (2015)
This gallery does not yet include all the photographs I have from this place. Below, you will find a link to the full gallery.
As for entry, there are usually two options – the official queue, where waiting times can easily exceed an hour, and a faster alternative. In practice, this often means the difference between a long wait and almost immediate entry. Choosing the quicker option typically involves paying a higher ticket price. While this may initially feel somewhat informal or even like an under the desk arrangement, in reality it is a standard and widely used solution. It allows visitors to bypass the longest queues and enter more efficiently, although at an additional cost. This time, we entered the standard way, without bypassing the queue. The next time, when I was travelling alone, I booked a ticket in advance through a tourist agency. It was the skip-te-line-solution. Was I satisfied? Not entirely – I would not consider that visit particularly successful – but I did manage to avoid the queue to enter Saint Peter’s Basilica. I wrote more about that experience in one of my later posts.







































