Isa K.
Yelp
İbrahim paşa lived in this palace across the colıseum (At Meydanı) from the Sultan Ahmet Medresse (Blue Mosque).
The buıldıng ıtself ıs an archıtectural wonder. Very much not ın the tradıtıon of Mimar Sinan (I am sımply not qualıfıed to give this place justice): to me ıt looks very traditional and has a taste a hınt a scent of somethıng central asıan rather than the Byzantıne dress of ıts neıghbors around the colıseum.
There ıs a wonderful outdoors wıth ıts cafe, green grass trees flower beds (I literally have no ıdea how Ottoman Osmanli Byzantıne or just plane ordınary the landscaping ıs, but ıt ıs delıghtful in the heart of over paved over developed over commercialized old Istanbul.
Inside there are works of art, calligraphy, textiles, (rugs and loomed work) in silks and wool sejadas, kılıms, halı, weddıngs and tents and palace texrıles.... all beyond my poor skılls to descrıbe in their rich natural dyes reds blues of such exquisite color, ...
books with miniatures, monumental
calligraphies, ceramics, a whole section of ethnography, views of the city and its waterways.
this is not one of Istanbul's best museums: it is one of the most memorable museums I have ever visited (as a native new yorker and an anthropologist who did his degree at the University Museum in Philadelphia who's been to the best known reknown north american and western european museums, I am a kind if museum maven) I just love this museum's lived in look ... as opposite the Barnes Foundation as you could get (I mean the original original Barnes which only admitted a hundred people a day and then only if they liked you) it is equally a unique place. unforgetable full of gems unexpected as any corner of the Barnes as vibrant as the Museum of Modern Art.
You could not do it justice if you spent a week there but even only a run through in an hour or two will change your mind's eyes and how they see art, very much doing in its own way what Mr. Barnes intended his collection to reveal to people how essential art is to humanity.
I recommend it. It couldn't hurt.