The Cobra Museum, opened in 1995, is dedicated to the CoBrA movement and modern art that builds on that foundation. The museum collection includes works by key figures such as Karel Appel, Corneille and Constant, alternating with contemporary artists working in the spirit of CoBrA.
The building - designed by architect Wim Quist - offers space, light, clean lines and openness. In the permanent display, the inner garden stands out: a Zen-inspired space by Shinkichi Tajiri, symbolic and sleek in form.

What keeps this museum fascinating is the bridge between historical and contemporary. Temporary exhibitions show how artists today still resonate with CoBrA's ideals: freedom, spontaneity, alienation. That combination keeps the museum space alive and relevant.
"Here you understand that painting is not a surface but a space to fall into, to breathe, to show what you could not say."
For the visitor, a visit never feels static. You move from colorful canvases to abstract sculpture, from experimentation to reflection. The route is logical, but invites you to wander - often you come back to places you passed by before.
Cobra Museum proves that art need not remain in museum showcases, but lends itself to dialogues between past and future.