Perelman Building

The Perelman Building is one of Philadelphia's most elegant architectural treasures, a seamless blend of Art Deco glamour and modern design that expands the story of the Philadelphia Museum of Art beyond its iconic main building.

Opened in 1927 as the Fidelity Mutual Life Insurance Company headquarters and later acquired by the museum, the Perelman Building is a masterpiece of symmetry and ornament. Its limestone façade, adorned with sculptural reliefs of mythic figures and geometric motifs, gleams in the morning sun like a monument to the optimism of early 20th-century design. Inside, the museum uses its luminous galleries to house photography, fashion, textiles, prints, and modern design, the more intimate and experimental side of its world-class collection. To step inside the Perelman is to move from grandeur to grace: where the main museum looks to antiquity, the Perelman speaks to the rhythms of the modern world, sleek, elegant, and quietly timeless.

The Perelman Building was one of the first skyscraper-style structures in Philadelphia designed entirely in the Art Deco idiom, a style that celebrated technology, progress, and craftsmanship.

Architects Zantzinger, Borie, and Medary, who also worked on the main Philadelphia Museum of Art, designed the building with a meticulous sense of proportion and ornamentation. The sculptural reliefs on its façade, crafted by artist Lee Lawrie, known for his work on New York's Rockefeller Center, depict allegorical figures symbolizing faith, security, and endurance. When the museum acquired the building in 2001, it undertook an ambitious restoration that preserved its gilded lobby and marble staircases while converting its offices into contemporary exhibition spaces. The structure was named after philanthropists Raymond and Ruth Perelman, whose contributions made the renovation possible. Today, the Perelman Building stands as both artifact and art space, a dialogue between Philadelphia's industrial heritage and its creative future. Its galleries also serve as a living laboratory for fashion curation and design innovation, housing everything from Balenciaga gowns to Bauhaus textiles under one historic roof.

When visiting the Philadelphia Museum of Art, set aside at least an hour to explore the Perelman Building, located just across the Benjamin Franklin Parkway.

Walk over from the main museum's grand steps, the stroll itself offers views of the skyline framed by trees and fountains. Begin your visit with the building's exterior: study the limestone reliefs and the shimmering bronze doors, whose geometric motifs echo the optimism of the Jazz Age. Inside, move through the rotating exhibitions, photography on the upper floors, design and fashion in the lower galleries. If you're visiting in the afternoon, sunlight streams through the tall windows, creating a golden glow across the marble lobby that feels cinematic. Don't miss the study rooms for prints and drawings, where curators occasionally unveil treasures from the archives by appointment. End your visit with a stop at the café for a view of the Parkway, the building's Art Deco lines perfectly mirroring Philadelphia's blend of classic and contemporary. The Perelman Building isn't just an annex, it's the city's quiet ode to craftsmanship, a space where history and innovation coexist in polished stone and light.

MAKE IT REAL

“Everyone pretends they came for the art, but really it's an excuse to climb those Rocky steps and throw their arms in the air like a local marathon runner who trained for none of it.”

Start your planning journey with Foresyte Travel.

Discover immersive stories crafted for luxury travelers.

GET THE APP

Philadelphia-Adjacency, philadelphia-pa-philadelphia-museum-of-art

Read the Latest:

Daytime aerial view of the Las Vegas Strip with Bellagio Fountains and major resorts.

📍 Itinerary Inspiration

Perfect weekend in Las Vegas

Read now
Illuminated water fountains in front of the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas

💫 Vibe Check

Five fascinations about Las Vegas

Read now
<< Back to news page
Right Menu Icon