The Menil Collection is open to the public, and admission is free. The museum is open Wednesday through Sunday 11 am to 7 pm. It is located near the
University of St. Thomas in the
Neartown area of Houston.
The Byzantine Fresco Chapel Located in a separate building near the main collection, the Byzantine Fresco Chapel formerly housed two 13th century
Byzantine church frescoes, an
apse semi-dome of the Virgin
Panagia and a dome featuring a depiction of Christ known as
Christ Pantocrator. After having been removed from a church in
Lysi in
Turkish-occupied North Cyprus by the illegal art trade, they were recovered during the 1980s. According to the museum, they were the only such frescoes in the Americas. They were held at the museum by agreement with their owners, the
Church of Cyprus. In September 2011 the Menil Collection announced that the frescoes would be permanently returned to Cyprus in February 2012, an example of
art repatriation. In January 2015, the Menil disclosed its plans to reuse the former consecrated chapel space as a site for long-term contemporary installation work. The first exhibition in the reopened space is "The Infinity Machine", a new work commissioned by the Menil by
Janet Cardiff and
George Bures Miller.
Cy Twombly Gallery In 1992,
Renzo Piano was commissioned by Dominique de Menil to build a small, independent pavilion dedicated to the work of
Cy Twombly, Jr. in the grounds of the Menil Collection. In contrast to the Menil’s main museum building and the surrounding bungalows, the Cy Twombly Gallery is built of sand-colored block concrete, is square in plan and contains nine galleries. Similar to the main museum, it is lit through the roof, but here with an external canopy of louvers, shading the sloping, hipped glass roof, below which a fabric ceiling diffuses the light, giving a reduced intensity of around 300 lux.
Menil Drawing Institute The Menil Drawing Institute, opened in 2018, is the first ground-up building in the United States dedicated to the exhibit, study, storage and conservation of modern and contemporary artworks on paper, according to the Menil Collection. Los Angeles–based architecture firm Johnston Marklee and New York–based landscape architecture firm Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates designed the Drawing Institute. They worked in close collaboration with the New York–based structural engineering firm Guy Nordenson and Associates. Johnston Marklee was selected to design it after winning a competition that also included
David Chipperfield,
SANAA and Tatiana Bilbao. Rhode Island–based
Gilbane Building Company, a subsidiary of
Gilbane, Inc., was selected as the general contractor. and north of the Dan Flavin Installation. Modestly scaled, the flat-roofed building tops out at , no taller than the neighboring gray bungalows on the campus. Half of its space is for underground storage, while the ground level will contain a large, flexible central living room, about of exhibition space, a scholar's cloister, rooms for seminars and other events, and a conservation lab, all wrapped around three courtyards. ==Vandalism==