A wonderful gallery, I liked it more than the exposition of the Museum of Fine Arts. Hungarians have someone to be proud of in the visual arts. Renaissance, modern, and other trends. 18th, 19th, 20th centuries. They give out an information booklet with a plan in Russian
The Art Museum of Hungary, located in an amazingly beautiful place and a beautiful architectural building, occupies three wings of the palace in Buda. The gallery, which includes about 100 thousand works of art, is rightfully considered the largest in the country. Residents and guests of Budapest have the opportunity to get acquainted with wonderful exhibitions from the funds of the gallery itself, as well as individual collections of the Museum of Fine Arts and other museums, including private ones, in Hungary.
The gallery includes permanent and temporary exhibitions. For familiarization (not cursory, but thoughtful), it takes quite a long time to visit. The exhibition halls are located on 4 floors (numbering from 0 to 3). Photo and video shooting is only possible at the permanent exhibition. Photo - with any entrance ticket, shooting - with a special ticket.
Clarification on the toilet rooms. They are marked on each floor, and from my own experience, all were free to visit.
At the entrance to the museum, opposite the ticket offices, there is an information desk where you will be kindly helped to navigate. A nice free addition was to receive a brochure (floor plan of all halls with designations in a foreign language, in this case, in Russian). Personal impression, I really liked it (there is no need to compare it with anything, each country has its own sights and masterpieces of art, including world art). I recommend it for a visit.
The gallery presents a collection of the Middle Ages and Renaissance and Baroque, Gothic (paintings on wood and wooden sculpture), modern art, NUDE sculptures, art of the XIX century and realism of the late XIX century, Hungarian art from 1896 to World War II, art of the XX century after 1945, the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, etc. European art is represented, among other things, by the works of Paul Gauguin, Claude Monet, Paul Cezanne. In general, everyone will find something for themselves to like or to perceive art in their understanding.