Museum of East Asian Art
The Museum of East Asian Art is an art collection from South East Asia housed in a restored Georgian building in Bennett Street, central Bath.
Not just popular with tourists, but also with students and scholars, the collection has nearly 2,000 objects of ceramics, bronzes and bamboo carvings from across the East Asian region. It is the only museum in Britain dedicated to the arts and cultures of this part of the world.
The museum is open every day except Monday all year round.
Planning your visit to Museum of East Asian Art
Museum of East Asian Art, 12 Bennett St, Bath, Somerset BA1, United Kingdom
No Records Found
Sorry, no records were found. Please adjust your search criteria and try again.
Maps failed to load
Sorry, unable to load the Maps API.
(Get directions)
Museum of East Asian Art 7 Day Weather Forecast
Bath weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
You may also like ...
In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can do near Museum of East Asian Art? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, places to eat and upcoming events.
The King of Wessex is a Wetherspoon pub in Bath and is a great place to come and visit with family and friends when searching for some pub food today.
Read more…
Beach: Portishead beach View: Located next to Portishead’s open-air pool and overlooking the small windswept beach at across the Bristol Channel. What’s on the menu?: A contemporary restaurant serving classic brasserie dishes, modern British cuisine and tapas. Stop off as well for afternoon tea and taste their delicious homemade cakes.
Read more…
Beach: Clevedon beach View: Located just behind the beach at Clevedon, with a view over the old Victorian seaside resort. What’s on the menu?: Light lunches, hearty soups, Sunday lunches, daily specials, homemade cakes and pastries
Read more…
The Bell Hanger is a Wetherspoon pub in Chepstow, Monmouthshire. Our pub offers a range of real ales, craft beers and freshly ground Lavazza coffee. Breakfast is served until noon, with our full food menu available until 11 pm.
Read more…
Portishead beach is located on the north Somerset coast within the Severn Estuary and is one of the closest beaches to Bristol at just 5 miles. The beach is an estuary beach and so you don’t really get sand, much more mud and rocky beach backed by some grass and salt marsh, adjacent to the beach is a 100-year-old artificial lake
Read more…
Clevedon Bay beach is a sand, pebble and rocky beach to the side of Clevedon pier. Facilities include parking, promenade, pier, shops, cafe, pubs.
Read more…
Middle Hope beach is a small remote sandy beach to the East of Sand Point. No facilities, access is on foot from either Sand Point car park (has toilets) or Kewstoke (full range of shops and places to eat).
Read more…
Sand Bay is a remote sand and shingle beach to the north of a Weston-super-Mare in North Somerset. The beach is backed by grass covered sand dunes and a road. Facilities include parking, cafe, toilets and a number of holiday and caravan parks.
Read more…
The Bath Assembly Rooms are situated right at the heart of the Georgian city of Bath in Somerset. Designed by John Wood the Younger in 1769, the Assembly Rooms have been designated as a grade I listed building and are a popular tourist attraction. When they were opened in 1771, they became the hub of local Georgian society. People gathered
Read more…
The Museum of Bath at Work tells the story of the commercial development of Bath over the last 2,000 years and is located at Camden Works on Julian Road in Bath, Somerset. First opened in 1978, visitors can stroll displays over four floors, with the main exhibit being that of a reconstruction of an engineering and mineral water making operation
Read more…
The Georgian Garden is situated just behind The Circus in central Bath. It is a recreated garden from the period 1760-1770 and follows the position of flower-beds and paths which were excavated by the Bath Archaelogical Trust in the 1980s. The Garden is open all year round and admission is free. Find the entrance in Gravel Walk between Royal Crescent
Read more…
The Building of Bath Collection is a museum dedicated to explaining the building of the Georgian city of Bath during the 18th century. The collection is housed in the Countess of Huntingdon’s Chapel, a grade II listed church in central Bath. Now owned and managed by the Bath Preservation Trust, the Collection is open to the public every day except
Read more…