The López Museum and Library, also known as simply the Lopez Museum, is a Philippine art and history museum and library located in Pasig, Philippines at the ground floor of the Benpres Building, Exchange Road corner Meralco Avenue, Ortigas Center.
![]() Lopez Museum signage | |
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Former name | López Memorial Museum |
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Established | February 13, 1960 (1960-02-13) |
Location | Benpres Building, Pasig, Metro Manila, Philippines |
Coordinates | 14.58243°N 121.06279°E / 14.58243; 121.06279 |
Type | Art museum and library |
Collection size | 500 artworks, 20,000 publications (2010)[1] |
Founder | Eugenio López Sr. |
Website | www |
The López Museum and Library was on February 13, 1960, by Eugenio López Sr.[2] It was among the first privately run museums in the Philippines and was originally housed inside a four-storey building designed by Angel Nakpil along Lancaster Street in Pasay.[3]
Initially founded as the López Memorial Museum, the institution was originally meant to be dedicated to López's parents, Benito and Presentacion López but shifted to maintaining a collection dedicated to Filipino heritage. Under its first curator, Renato Constantino, the museum acquired the Juan Luna painting, España y Filipinas which complemented López growing collection of Filipiniana books and maps.[4]
The López Museum moved to the Benpres Building in Pasig on April 19, 1986, with its previous building in Pasay later demolished.[3]
In 2012, it was announced that the López Museum would be moving to a building at the Rockwell Center in Makati.[5] However it was only in 2017, that the museum that the relocation process has started. The museum was closed as part of preparations for its relocation.[6] The museum's collection will be split in two locations: at the Eugenio Lopez Center in Antipolo, Rizal and a space at The Proscenium at Rockwell.[7][8]
The López Museum and Library is dedicated to housing artworks by reputed Filipino artists such as Juan Luna, and Felix Resurreccion Hidalgo, Rizaliana memorabilia and Filipiniana materials and publications.[2]
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Italics denote buildings under construction or planned. |