Liberace Museum
Constantly built, rebuilt and renovated, Las Vegas is covered in the kind of up-to-the-minute polish of a city constructed yesterday. The Liberace Museum, considered one of the best museums in Las Vegas, offers a view of the city's cultural history by focusing on one of its most infamous entertainers. Liberace became an extremely prominent musician in America and nowhere were his dazzling (some would say gaudy) costumes and stage sets more at home than in Las Vegas. The museum is divided into two galleries. The first houses 18 of his 39 pianos (including his own Rhinestone-covered Baldwin piano and a rare, early English grand piano from 1788) as well as his car collection, including his one-of-a-kind Rolls Royce covered with mirror tiles etched with galloping horses. The second gallery houses costumes, stage props and candelabra. Proceeds from the not-for-profit museum support scholarships for the performing arts.
1775 Tropicana Avenue East
Tel: (702) 798 5595.
Website: www.liberace.org
Opening hours: Tues-Sat 1000-1700, Sun 1200-1600.
Admission charge.
The Gallery Featuring The Wynn Collection
Situated inside of the Wynn Las Vegas, The Gallery featuring The Wynn Collection houses an impressive collection of 16th- to 20th-century European and American paintings featuring canvases from Steve and Elaine Wynn's personal collection of fine art by such artists as Gauguin, van Gogh, Monet and Picasso. Audio tours of the collection are available and The Gallery Shop carries exhibition-related items as well as prints and posters of the master artworks exhibited. The Gallery made international headlines following a blunder by the near-blind Steve Wynn himself, who during a press conference, accidently punched a hole in a rare Picasso painting that was set to be auctioned shortly after.
3201 Las Vegas Boulevard South (inside Wynn Las Vegas)
Tel: (702) 770 7000.
Website: www.wynnlasvegas.com
Opening Hours: Daily 1000-2100; last entrance 2015.
Admission charge.
Old Las Vegas Mormon State Historic Park
This decidedly low-key attraction may not have neon signs and an army of one-armed bandits but it does lend a sense of what Las Vegas was like before gambling stole its soul. Located north of Downtown, Old Las Vegas Mormon State Historic Park is the site of the original adobe fort used by the first Mormon settlers in the Las Vegas Valley. Built by missionaries from Salt Lake City in 1885, the fort was abandoned just a year later, due to the harsh conditions. A shed is the only remaining original building but the rest of the site has been reconstructed. Rangers are on hand to provide interpretation and information. The museum on the property is closed from mid October to mid May.
500 East Washington Avenue
Tel: (702) 486 3511.
Website: http://parks.nv.gov/olvmf.htm
Opening hours: Daily 0800-1630.
Admission charge.
Constantly built, rebuilt and renovated, Las Vegas is covered in the kind of up-to-the-minute polish of a city constructed yesterday. The Liberace Museum, considered one of the best museums in Las Vegas, offers a view of the city's cultural history by focusing on one of its most infamous entertainers. Liberace became an extremely prominent musician in America and nowhere were his dazzling (some would say gaudy) costumes and stage sets more at home than in Las Vegas. The museum is divided into two galleries. The first houses 18 of his 39 pianos (including his own Rhinestone-covered Baldwin piano and a rare, early English grand piano from 1788) as well as his car collection, including his one-of-a-kind Rolls Royce covered with mirror tiles etched with galloping horses. The second gallery houses costumes, stage props and candelabra. Proceeds from the not-for-profit museum support scholarships for the performing arts.
1775 Tropicana Avenue East
Tel: (702) 798 5595.
Website: www.liberace.org
Opening hours: Tues-Sat 1000-1700, Sun 1200-1600.
Admission charge.
The Gallery Featuring The Wynn Collection
Situated inside of the Wynn Las Vegas, The Gallery featuring The Wynn Collection houses an impressive collection of 16th- to 20th-century European and American paintings featuring canvases from Steve and Elaine Wynn's personal collection of fine art by such artists as Gauguin, van Gogh, Monet and Picasso. Audio tours of the collection are available and The Gallery Shop carries exhibition-related items as well as prints and posters of the master artworks exhibited. The Gallery made international headlines following a blunder by the near-blind Steve Wynn himself, who during a press conference, accidently punched a hole in a rare Picasso painting that was set to be auctioned shortly after.
3201 Las Vegas Boulevard South (inside Wynn Las Vegas)
Tel: (702) 770 7000.
Website: www.wynnlasvegas.com
Opening Hours: Daily 1000-2100; last entrance 2015.
Admission charge.
Old Las Vegas Mormon State Historic Park
This decidedly low-key attraction may not have neon signs and an army of one-armed bandits but it does lend a sense of what Las Vegas was like before gambling stole its soul. Located north of Downtown, Old Las Vegas Mormon State Historic Park is the site of the original adobe fort used by the first Mormon settlers in the Las Vegas Valley. Built by missionaries from Salt Lake City in 1885, the fort was abandoned just a year later, due to the harsh conditions. A shed is the only remaining original building but the rest of the site has been reconstructed. Rangers are on hand to provide interpretation and information. The museum on the property is closed from mid October to mid May.
500 East Washington Avenue
Tel: (702) 486 3511.
Website: http://parks.nv.gov/olvmf.htm
Opening hours: Daily 0800-1630.
Admission charge.
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