Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±

Museum of Applied Arts of Tashkent.

© Artem Yampolcev/Shutterstock

Museum of Applied Arts

Top choice in Tashkent


The Museum of Applied Arts occupies an exquisite house full of bright ghanch (carved and painted plaster) and carved wood. It was built in the 1930s, at the height of the Soviet period, but nonetheless serves as a sneak preview of the older architectural highlights lurking in Bukhara and Samarkand. The ceramic and textile exhibits here, with English descriptions, are a fine way to bone up on the regional decorative styles of Uzbekistan. There’s a small cafe and pricey gift shop here too.


Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¼´Ê±¿ª½±'s must-see attractions

Nearby Tashkent attractions

1. Wedding Palace

0.88 MILES

Southeast of the Friendship Palace is the Soviet-era Wedding Palace – a vulgar, crooked chunk of Khrushchev-era concrete.

3. State Fine Arts Museum

0.95 MILES

The four floors of this excellent museum walk you through 1500 years of art in Uzbekistan, from 7th-century Buddhist relics from Kuva and the Greek…

4. Alisher Navoi Monument

0.97 MILES

Near the Oliy Majlis in Navoi Park is a vast promenade and this post-Soviet Monument to Alisher Navoi, 15th-century Turkic poet and Uzbekistan's newly…

5. Senate Building

0.98 MILES

The shiny white edifice on the western side of the Independence Square is the Senate building. The president's office and most ministries take up the…

6. Navoi Park

1 MILES

Downtown Tashkent’s largest park has an eccentric mix of brutal Soviet-era, Uzbek government buildings and post-independence monuments, all set in a…

7. Istiklol Palace

1.08 MILES

Formerly the People’s Friendship Palace, this concert hall is one of several striking Soviet-era buildings in Navoi Park. It looks like a moon-landing…

8. Romanov Palace

1.12 MILES

The animal-festooned brick facade of the Tsarist-era Romanov Palace is worth a quick look but the building itself is closed to the public.