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      • three women walk through rows of rosesView All Things to Do in Portland
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Explore Oregon’s history, local artwork and internationally renowned pieces from around the world at the Portland Art Museum.
Credit: Catalina Gaitan
Things to Do in Portland

Portland Museums

Portland is packed with cultural interests and exhibitions, even in the streets.

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Explore Oregon’s history, local artwork and internationally renowned pieces from around the world at the Portland Art Museum.
Credit: Catalina Gaitan

Portland is home to incredible art, from sidewalk galleries to cultural institutions to the West Coast’s most outstanding fine art exhibitions. This city’s rich creative community displays a wide range of art, history, culture and curiosities, offering visitors and locals many things to do in and around Portland.

Find Portland Museums

Portland museums can be found all across the city.

Must-See Museums

Want to spend a whole day at one of Portland’s most memorable institutions? The Portland Art Museum and OMSI are must-visit destinations for visitors, couples and families. Although the Portland Children’s Museum closed in 2021, there are plenty of all-ages activities at these heavy-hitters to keep you and the kids occupied for hours.

Portland Art Museum

visitors look at a framed oil painting in the Portland Art Museum
Visitors look at Portrait of the Comte de M. (1831) by Jerome Martin Langlois, the Younger at the Portland Art Museum.

The Portland Art Museum (PAM) is Oregon’s largest museum, spanning two historic buildings in downtown’s South Park Blocks. It features a wide variety of art from multiple periods and regions, rotating exhibitions and Native American and Pacific Coast art, featuring outstanding works by Native American art masters such as Allan Houser, Charles Edenshaw, and Maria Martinez. The Portland Art Museum’s permanent collection galleries will close in 2024 for construction, but special exhibitions and the museum gift store remain open.

in a gallery at the Portland Art Museum, a facilitator tosses scarves into the air for children to play with
The Portland Art Museum offers events for families and children.

Visiting the museum with children? The Portland Art Museum published this handy guide to visiting a museum with kids. They also offer workshops and family days; check the calendar for more details.

OMSI (Oregon Museum of Science and Industry)

glass atrium lobby with large lettering reading OMSI
The main lobby at the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI).

Just across the river is OMSI (Oregon Museum of Science and Industry), Portland’s science museum. Visitors to OMSI can study the cosmos in the planetarium, watch movie screenings in a large-screen theater, tour a retired Navy submarine, and visit permanent and traveling exhibits to learn about physics, nature and the human body. At night, OMSI’s 21+ “After Dark” events pair science with beer and wine.

Modern Galleries and Museums

Take in the latest contemporary art, performance and design at these Portland galleries and museums.

  • Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA)

    The Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) organizes the annual Time-Based Arts Festival and hosts exhibitions, lectures and performances by contemporary, experimental artists, providing a citywide platform for creation and discovery.

  • Oregon Contemporary

    Formerly known as Disjecta, Oregon Contemporary is known for its innovative programming. It has hosted the Portland Biennial, a major survey of contemporary Oregon artists, since 2010. The gallery is free and open weekends.

  • Chefas Projects

    Highlighting a diverse blend of contemporary artists from around the world, Chefas Projects features monthly exhibitions with an emphasis on cultivating new talent and encouraging risk and evolution among established visionaries.

  • Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Portland State University

    This free art museum features works by Northwest artists and Portland State University faculty and students, along with special events and exhibitions by national and international artists.

  • Rental Sales Gallery, Portland Art Museum

    Just across the street from the Portland Art Museum, the Rental Sales Gallery hosts a large inventory of art that any member of the Portland Art Museum can rent for several months or purchase.

Art and Culture Museums in Portland

These art and culture museums pay tribute to the rich cultural heritage and lived experience of the diverse peoples of Portland and Oregon.

Portland Chinatown Museum

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The Portland Chinatown Museum is a permanent 2,400-square-foot exhibition gallery that tells the story of Portland’s early Chinese immigrants. Located in Old Town Chinatown, its front galleries display work by contemporary Asian American artists. Previous exhibitions at the Portland Chinatown Museum have explored the history of Chinese-owned businesses and iconic Chinatown buildings and highlighted the work of previously unknown Portland-born Chinese American artist Bue Jack Kee. Docent-led group tours are available by reservation only.

Japanese American Museum of Oregon

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The Japanese American Museum of Oregon (JAMO) opened its new museum in May 2021 in Old Town Chinatown after purchasing a property within the bounds of Portland’s historic Japantown. The location displays a permanent exhibition about early Japanese immigration to Oregon and the Japanese immigrant experience during World War II. In 1942, after the signing of Executive Order 9066, over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry living along the West Coast were incarcerated by the military. JAMO is near the Japanese American Historical Plaza on the Willamette River waterfront and has sculptures, boulders carved with poetry and a large stand of cherry blossom trees.

a city skyline behind cherry blossom trees
Tom McCall Waterfront Park in downtown Portland is home to 100 beautiful cherry blossom trees, lending striking color to the riverside each spring — they were a gift from Japan to mark the dedication of the park’s Japanese American Historical Plaza in 1990.

Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education

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Located in Old Town Chinatown, the Oregon Jewish Museum and Center for Holocaust Education (OJMCHE) is dedicated to Oregon Jewish stories. In addition to a series of public programming, including lectures and film screenings, OJMCHE has permanent and rotating exhibitions featuring contemporary art, a history of the Holocaust that employs the stories of Oregon survivors and installations addressing human rights.

The Oregon Holocaust Memorial in Washington Park is free and open to the public from dawn until dark every day of the year and is ADA-accessible.

Hellenic American Cultural Center and Museum

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The Hellenic-American Cultural Center and Museum (HACCM) presents stories and artifacts about the Greek-American experience in Oregon and Washington. Its permanent display includes pottery, paintings, textiles, traditional dress and other artifacts, and its collection includes works by Greek artists, including Tom Stefopoulos, the artist of the Lovejoy Column murals.

HACCM is open Tuesday through Friday, 11 a.m.-3 p.m. or by appointment; admission is free.

Center for Native Arts and Cultures

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In 2021, the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation (NACF) received the gift of the Yale Union Laundry building, which will become the new headquarters for NACF and has been renamed the Center for Native Arts and Cultures.

Currently, the NACF offers monthly building tours and hosts regular exhibitions, film screenings, artist talks and master artist workshops.

Family-Friendly Museums

Entertain and educate the whole family with these attractions and activities.

an exterior view of the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI) beside the Willamette River with a huge black submarine docked by a pier

OMSI: Portland’s Interactive Science Museum

With its huge exhibit halls, interactive science labs, multiple auditoriums, “After Dark” events and more, the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI) lures visitors of all ages.

a steam locomotive inside a museum

Oregon Rail Heritage Center

The free museum features three vintage steam locomotives, including the one that pulled the U.S. Bicentennial Freedom Train in 1976.

people peruse the large displays of trees and rocks inside the World Forestry Center

World Forestry Center Discovery Museum

Tree- and forest-lovers of all ages can learn about the importance of sustainability and experience a Portland icon at the World Forestry Center Discovery Museum, with exhibits on local and global forests.

Historical Museums in Portland

Portland and Oregon have a rich history and boast several educational and inspirational museums and cultural heritage centers.

Pittock Mansion

exterior of Pittock Mansion
High above Northwest Portland, Pittock Mansion offers picture-perfect views of the city, as well as insights into Portland history.

The beautiful Pittock Mansion, located in the northwest hills near Forest Park and the Portland Japanese Garden, is the historic home of Henry Pittock, a pioneer on the Oregon Trail. Pittock worked at and eventually ran “The Oregonian” newspaper. In the early 1900s, he built Pittock Mansion, which was opened to the public in 1965 as a historic house museum. Today, visitors can stroll the grounds of Pittock Mansion for free and tour the interior of the building, dressed with period furnishings, for a fee.

Oregon Maritime Museum

a boat is docked along the portland waterfront
The Oregon Maritime Museum, housed in an historic steam-powered, sternwheel ship-assist tugboat, is permanently moored in the Willamette River by Tom McCall Waterfront Park.

Credit: Ashley Anderson

The Oregon Maritime Museum is housed in “Portland,” the historic sternwheeler moored on the Willamette River. The boat is the last steam-powered sternwheel tug to operate in the United States, using the same technology from the turn of the 20th century. Visitors tour the steamer, including the pilot house and engine room, and can view ship models, maritime artifacts, and displays about steam power, sailing vessels, and the liberty ships of World War II.

Five Oaks Museum

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About a half hour outside Portland, the Five Oaks Museum on the PCC Rock Creek Campus tells the story of the Tualatin Valley, its residents, and its native plant and animal species. 

The Five Oaks Museum is open Thursdays through Saturdays from noon to 4 p.m.; visitors in small groups of 10 or fewer must make a reservation through the official site. Admission is free with a suggested $5 or $10 donation for adults.

Oregon Rail Heritage Center

Many people are admiring a bright orange steam engine at the Oregon Rail Heritage Center.
A vintage steam engine at the Oregon Rail Heritage Center.

The Oregon Rail Heritage Center is an indoor museum with historic exhibits and multiple restored vintage trains, including old steam and diesel locomotives, and a gift shop. Visitors can hear stories from the volunteers staffing the museum and take a 45-minute ride on a train on Saturdays from March through October. 

The Oregon Rail Heritage Center is open Thursday through Sunday, 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Admission to the center is free; train rides are ticketed, and prices vary.

Oregon Historical Society

Oregon Historical Society entrance
The Oregon Historical Society, located on downtown’s South Park Blocks across the street from the Portland Art Museum, features many permanent and rotating exhibits covering local history both before and after Oregon became a state in 1859.

Credit: Justin Katigbak, Travel Portland

The Oregon Historical Society in the downtown Park Blocks has three floors of exhibitions relating to Oregon history, including rare photographs, documents and artifacts, including the “Portland Penny,” the 1835 American copper penny that was used in an 1845 coin toss to name the new town of Portland, and a gift shop for Portland and Oregon souvenirs.

End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center

A historical interpreter in period costume speaks to museum guests
A historical interpreter at the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.

About a half hour outside of Portland, in Oregon City, visitors can learn about the Oregon Trail at the End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center. The museum and interpretive center is at the end of the 2,000-mile-long (3219 km) Oregon Trail, which began in Missouri. It has exhibits of artifacts, educational films, a garden, and a gift shop. Activities for children include candle-making, packing a wagon and period costumes.

Keep Portland’s Museums Weird

Explore this collection of offbeat museums offering strange exhibits and extraordinary experiences.

More Fun & Weird Museums
  • The Morrison Street Minigallery

    Like the tiny lending libraries you find in front of homes throughout Portland, you might also discover this mini-gallery, which features local and DIY artists who work on a small scale.

  • Movie Madness

    Devoted to rare and obscure films, this video rental store is also a museum, displaying original costumes and props from classics like The Wizard of Oz and The Sound of Music.

  • The Zymoglyphic Museum

    This free mini-museum on the second floor of a garage is a cabinet of curiosities. It focuses on a fictional age, with exhibits created from found objects, driftwood and more. Open on the 2nd and 4th Sunday of every month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.

  • Freakybuttrue Peculiarium

    The Freakybuttrue Peculiarium is an offbeat emporium that houses displays of Bigfoot and other paranormal denizens of the Northwest and beyond. Nearly everything is for sale, from the sculptures and artwork to scoops of ice cream in the snack shop.

  • Portland Puppet Museum

    The Portland Puppet Museum is your place to learn about all things puppet and to let loose your inner child. It’s fun for all ages, with special puppet exhibits and shows. Open Thursday-Sunday from 2-8 p.m.; admission is always free.

Nature Museums in Portland

These museums, exhibition spaces and gardens pay tribute to the wonderful nature surrounding the city of Portland.

The World Forestry Center & Discovery Museum

person walking through a museum exhibition of different trees
Learn about all types of flora and fauna at the World Forestry Center.

Credit: Ashley Anderson

The World Forestry Center & Discovery Museum, a family-friendly indoor museum in Portland’s Washington Park, explores the sustainability of forests and trees through various interactive displays and exhibits. Visitors can explore many exhibitions, including learning about the animals in the forests of the Pacific Northwest, exploring different types of forests around the world, and viewing photos and clippings of the “World’s Largest Log Cabin” from the 1905 Lewis and Clark Exposition. Visitors can also view “Peggy the Train,” a 42-ton Lima Shay-geared locomotive, and a five million-year-old, 10,000-pound petrified tree stump.

Hoyt Arboretum

two people walk as sun filters through fir trees on a path through an urban arboretum
Find 2,300 species of trees (including stately redwoods), miles of hiking trails and striking fall colors at Hoyt Arboretum.

Credit: Diego Diaz

In Washington Park, Portland’s botanical garden, Hoyt Arboretum, is “a living museum of trees,” with over 6,000 trees in its living collection. There are 2,300 species of trees from six continents, including 67 species listed as rare or endangered. Just minutes from downtown Portland, there are 12 miles (19.3 km) of hiking trails through 190 acres (77 hectares). Common evolutionary ancestors group trees together, and visitors can enjoy trees with each season, like blooming magnolias in spring, scented conifers in summer and colorful maple leaves in fall.

The Hoyt Arboretum grounds are open from 5 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily, and there is no fee for admission.

Tryon Creek State Natural Area

a small group of adults and children walk down a path in a forest
Tryon Creek State Natural Area is mere minutes from downtown Portland.

Credit: Ashley Anderson

Tryon Creek State Natural Area, located about 15 minutes from downtown Portland, is a green area with 658 acres (266.3 hectares) of second-growth forests, 8 miles (12.9 km) of hiking trails, eight bridges and a boardwalk over a wetland. Visitors can look for birds and wildlife along gently sloping paved trails, spot flowers during a hike, or ride bikes through the paved paths as part of Portland’s metropolitan area bikeway system 40-mile loop. 

Tryon Creek State Natural Area is open for day use year-round. Details may change; please see the official site for current information.

Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals

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The Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals is located in Hillsboro, Oregon, about 25 minutes west of downtown Portland. The museum is home to the “Alma Rose” Rhodochrosite from the Sweet Home Mine in Alma, Colorado and has a gallery of minerals, a museum gift shop and grounds with trails and a rock pile for kids to dig through.

Arts, Attractions, Museums

Visual Arts in Portland

Feast your eyes on more visual arts wonders across the city.

More Visual Arts
white walled interior of an art gallery with 6 paintings hanging on three sides of an open room

Portland Art Gallery Scene

Art enthusiasts will find a dose of inspiration in Portland’s tight-knit independent gallery scene.

A person explores brightly lit, highly textured cave-like structure.

Explore Portland’s Immersive Art Experiences

From a “quantum trampoline” at Hopscotch Portland to a larger-than-life troll, get a taste of the region’s immersive art exhibits.

small white box with tiny art gallery diorama is displayed on a neighborhood street

Explore Southeast Portland’s Little Free Landmarks

Walk or bike through Southeast Portland to visit quirky sidewalk art galleries, little free libraries and more.

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