Isabella Stewart Gardner (1840-1924) was an incorrigible individualist long before strong-willed behavior was acceptable for women in polite Boston society, and her iconoclasm paid off for art lovers. "Mrs. Jack" designed her exquisite home in the style of a 15th-century Venetian palace and filled it with European, American, and Asian painting and sculpture, much chosen with the help of her friend and protégé Bernard Berenson. You'll see works by Titian, Botticelli, Raphael, Rembrandt, Matisse, and Mrs. Gardner's friends James McNeill Whistler and John Singer Sargent. Titian's magnificent Europa, which many scholars consider his finest work, is one of the most important Renaissance paintings in the United States. If you enjoy representational art and ornate architecture, run right over; if not, you'll probably be happier at the nearby Museum of Fine Arts.
The building, which opened to the public after Mrs. Gardner's death, holds a glorious hodgepodge of furniture and architectural details imported from European churches and palaces. The pièce de résistance is the magnificent sky-lit courtyard, filled year-round with fresh flowers from the museum greenhouse. Although the terms of Mrs. Gardner's will forbid changing the arrangement of the museum's content, there has been some evolution: A special exhibition gallery, which opened in 1992, features two or three changing shows a year, often by contemporary artists in residence.
The cafe serves lunch and desserts, and there's an excellent gift shop.
280 The Fenway.Phone: 617/566-1401.Open: Tues-Sun, some Mon holidays 11am-5pm.Admission $11 adults weekends, $10 adults weekdays, $7 seniors, $5 college students with ID, free for children under 18.Closed Thanksgiving, Dec 25, Dec 31.T: Green Line E to Museum.