California Palace of the Legion of Honor | |
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| Established | 1924; 102 years ago (1924) |
|---|---|
| Location | 100 34th Avenue,San Francisco,California |
| Collections | Ancient artifacts; European art, crafts, ceramics, and furnishings; Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts |
| Architect | George Applegarth and Henri Guillaume (1924),Edward Larrabee Barnes andMark Cavagnero (1995) |
| Public transit access | |
| Website | legionofhonor |
TheLegion of Honor, formally known as theCalifornia Palace of the Legion of Honor, is anart museum located inSan Francisco, on theWest Side of the city. Located inLincoln Park, the Legion of Honor is a component of theFine Arts Museums of San Francisco (FAMSF), which also administers thede Young Museum.[1] In 2024, the two combined museums were ranked 15th in theWashington Post's list of the best art museums in the U.S.[2]
The land on which the Legion of Honor stands was once the city-ownedGolden Gate Cemetery, established in 1870 and closed in 1909. It held about 29,000 remains and included a Chinese burial ground and aPotter's field.[3]
The Legion of Honor was the gift ofAlma de Bretteville Spreckels, wife of thesugar magnate andthoroughbredracehorse owner/breederAdolph B. Spreckels.[4]: 9–10 After some persuading, Alma convinced Adolph to fund a museum project. To acquire more art and financial support, Alma embarked on a trip to Europe and was successful in requesting donations of fine art from the French government and fromQueen Marie of Romania, who donated a replica of her Byzantine Golden Room.[5]
The building is a full-scale replica, byGeorge Applegarth and Henri Guillaume, of the French Pavilion at the 1915Panama–Pacific International Exposition, which in turn was a three-quarter-scale version of thePalais de la Légion d'Honneur (also known as theHôtel de Salm) inParis, by Pierre Rousseau (1782). At the close of the exposition, which was located just a few miles away, theFrench government granted Spreckels permission to construct a permanent replica of the French Pavilion.World War I delayed the groundbreaking until 1921. Dedicated as a memorial to California soldiers killed in the war,[4]: 7 the museum opened onArmistice Day, November 11, 1924.[6]
The museum building occupies an elevated site inLincoln Park in the northwest of the city, with views over the nearbyGolden Gate Bridge and the distant downtown skyline.
Between March 1992 and November 1995 the Legion underwent a major renovation that included seismic strengthening, building systems upgrades, restoration of historic architectural features, and an underground expansion that added 35,000 square feet. The Court of Honor was pierced by a pyramidal skylight opening onto the new gallery space below, a quotation in miniature of theLouvre Pyramid. The architects for the project wereEdward Larrabee Barnes andMark Cavagnero.[6]
The plaza and fountain in front of the Legion of Honor is the western terminus of theLincoln Highway, the first improved road for automobiles acrossAmerica. The terminus marker and an interpretive plaque are located in the southwest corner of the plaza and fountain, just to the left of the Palace, next to the bus stop. Dominating the classical plaza isPax Jerusalemme, a modern sculpture byMark di Suvero that stirred controversy at its installation in 2000.[7] In 2023, US presidentJoe Biden held a state dinner at the Legion of Honor for world leaders, including Chinese presidentXi Jinping.[8]

The Legion of Honor displays a collection spanning more than 6,000 years of ancient and European art and houses the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts.
The Hall of Antiquities displays ancient works from Egypt, the Near East, Greece, and Rome, including sculptures, figurines, vessels, jewelry, and carved reliefs. Notable works include a4,000-year-old carved wood figure ofSeneb, an Egyptian royal scribe. The collection is supported in part by the Ancient Art Council, which offers a speakers program focusing on the ancient world.[9][10]
The museum contains a representative collection of European art, the largest portion of which is French. Its most distinguished collection is ofsculpture byAuguste Rodin. Casts of some of his most famous works are on display, including one ofThe Thinker in the Court of Honor. Other artists in the collection includeEl Greco,Titian,Rubens,Rembrandt,Boucher,David,Tiepolo,Gainsborough and many of theImpressionists andpost-Impressionists—Degas,Renoir,Monet,Pissarro,Seurat,Cézanne,van Gogh and others.
The Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts (AFGA) is responsible for the museum's collection of works on paper. With more than 90,000 items, the AFGA is the largest repository of works of art on paper in the western United States. The department is named for Moore and Hazel Achenbach, who gave the bulk of their collection to the city of San Francisco in 1948, and the remainder upon Moore Achenbach's death in 1963. Many additional acquisitions form the basis for special collections within the department, such as the Anderson Collection of Graphic Arts.[11] Selections from the Logan collection, more than 400 books dating from the nineteenth century to the present, are regularly used in exhibitions in the Reva and David Logan Gallery of Illustrated Books located in a small room off the Hall of Antiquities.[12]
The museum's collection of European Decorative Arts includes a gilded Spanish ceiling from c. 1500; numerous items of furniture, includingHorace Walpole’scommode of 1763 fromStrawberry Hill House, west of London; and three period rooms, including the Salon Doré from the Hôtel de La Trémoille, Paris, said to be the only complete example of a pre-Revolutionary Parisian salon to be displayed anywhere.[13][14]
The Bowles Porcelain Gallery displays an array of porcelain and pottery from England and continental Europe with a strong emphasis on the eighteenth century. Adjacent to the gallery is the Ceramic Study Center.[15]
The Contemporary Arts Program, which brings the work of living artists into dialogue with the building and the collections, was inaugurated in 2017 with an exhibition of more than 30 works byUrs Fischer installed throughout the museum.[16] Subsequent exhibitions have featured works and interventions by artists includingLynn Hershman Leeson,[17]Julian Schnabel,[18]Alexandre Singh,[19] andWangechi Mutu.[20]
Situated off the northwest corner of the Legion grounds is theHolocaust Memorial, a sculptural group of white-painted bronze byGeorge Segal installed in 1984. Although not part of the Legion's collection, the sculpture is often seen by visitors to the museum.

In 1924,John D. Spreckels commissioned the Ernest M. Skinner Company of Boston to build thesymphonic organ, which is centrally located in the Spreckels Gallery (gallery 10). It was designed to blend into the museum's structure; its 4,500 pipes are not visible to visitors, hidden behind thetrompe-l'œil ceiling painted to resemble a marbleapse.[21] Organ concerts are performed every Saturday at 4:00 p.m.[22]
The 316-seat James A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Theater, located downstairs off the Hall of Antiquities, is a venue for chamber music concerts by theSan Francisco Symphony and for lectures and other programs. Architect George Applegarth designed the circular theater and decorated it in the style ofLouis XVI. The descending entrance stairways on either side are decorated with portraits byNicolas de Largillière.[23][24] The ceiling mural isThe Apotheosis of the California Soldier by Spanish artistJulio Vila y Prades.[4]: 95