Vincent Hall feels like a place made for people who do like art, but not necessarily whisper corridors and display cases. You enter a large, dark space where projections take over the walls (and often the floor), with sound that doesn't "sit there" but carries the experience. The result: you're not looking at a work, you're standing in it.
What makes Vincent Hall especially attractive now is that there are three shows are running at the same time. So you can choose by mood. Bosch. Secret Signs is the most tantalizing: full of symbols, strange details and scenes your eyes are sucked to over and over again. This format fits Bosch absurdly well, because you finally see micro-things big without having to hang your nose on a panel.

The Frida Kahlo-show (Viva la Vida) is the most narrative and emotional. You get big images, photos/prints and a clear focus on Frida's world and iconography - it feels more like a journey through atmosphere and identity than a "lesson."
This is the kind of outing where you don't "just watch," but really get lost for a while.
And then Van Gogh. Immersive Exhibition: especially nice if you go with someone who needs recognition and pace.
Vincent Hall is on Mauritskade; you're right by Oosterpark/ARTIS, making it easy to tack on a short walk without it becoming "a project."