Tours, Guides, and Maps

Let a docent introduce you to the museum or use one of our self-guided itineraries to explore on your own—all are free.

Tours

Guided Tours

Whether this is your first time discovering the National Gallery or we are welcoming you back, these free tours are for you.

Visitors look at a painting in the National Gallery of Art.

Group Tours

Free group tours are available for groups of 15 or more people. Each tour lasts approximately one hour and is geared toward an adult audience. Learn how to request a guided group tour.

Field Trips

We offer a selection of in-person and virtual field trips for groups of at least 15 students.

Audio tours

Self-guided itinerary

Six women, eight men, two satyrs, and one child gather in pairs and trios in a loose row that spans the width of this nearly square painting. They are set within a landscape with craggy rocks, cliffs, and trees. Most of the people face us, and the men, women, and child have pale skin. The two satyrs have men’s torsos and furry goat’s legs, and they have darker, olive complexions. Most of the men wear voluminous, knee-length togas wrapped in short robes in shades of white, topaz blue, grass green, coral orange, or rose pink. Most of the women wear long, dress-like garments in tones of shell pink, apricot orange, or lapis blue over white sleeves. For all but one woman, their garments have fallen off one shoulder to reveal a round, firm breast. Several objects are strewn on the rocky, dirt ground in front of the group, including a wide, wooden bucket with a piece of paper affixed to its front to our right, a glass goblet, a pitchfork, a large blue and white ceramic dish filled with grapes and small yellow fruits, and an overturned cup near the center. Cliff-like, craggy rocks rise steeply behind the group to our left, filling much of the sky opposite a tall grove of leafy, dark green trees to our right. A few puffy white clouds float across the vivid blue sky. The slip of paper on the barrel has been inscribed, “joannes bellinus venetus p MDXIIII.”

Must-Sees

Follow our guide to the highlights that visitors love most.

Maps