Stockholm Pride at the Hallwyl Museum 2025

Visit the home of one of Sweden’s greatest arts and antique collectors from the turn of the 20th-century: Countess Wilhelmina von Hallwyl. In connection with Stockholm Pride, the Hallwyl Museum invites you to an exhibition and offer two for one admission!

Celebrate Pride with us – two for one on admission!

During Stockholm Pride, July 29–August 3, you get two-for-one on the entrance fee to the Hallwyl Museum upon presenting a Pride wristband or Pride ticket. Guided tours are not included in the offer and must be purchased separately. Entrance tickets are sold on-site at the museum.

Admission prices

  • Adult: 150 SEK (also applies to seniors and students)
  • Children and youth up to 18 years old: Free entry
On View: July 29 – August 24

Exhibition – In exquisite company

Rolf de Maré, the grandson of the von Hallwyl couple, lived a life in constant motion – between continents, art forms, and the boundaries of the permitted and the forbidden. In connection with Stockholm Pride 2025, the Hallwyl Museum invites you to an exhibition where we encounter him through portraits by artist Niklas Blomkvist.

About the exhibition

A painted portrait of two men.
Rolf+Hans. Photo: Niklas Blomkvist.

Visit the Exhibition

The exhibition can be viewed independently during the museum's opening hours.

Good to Know Before Your Visit

  • Wardrobe: Backpacks and outerwear is not allowed to bring in to the museum. Instead, backpacks and outerwear can be locked away for safekeeping in lockers that are adjacent to the entrance of the museum.
  • Packed meal: Food and drink are not allowed in the museum. Hallwyl Restaurant is located in the courtyard of the museum and serves food.
  • Strollers and prams: For evacuation reasons, it is not possible to bring a stroller/pram with you around the museum, however there are a few places for leaving strollers. The nearest place to lock prams is on Norrmalmstorg.

Plan your visit

Accessibility

The Hallwyl Museum has five floors, but unfortunately no elevator. The only way to move around the museum is via stairs. The number of steps varies depending on where in the house you wish to go. If you choose to join a guided tour of the house, it involves climbing and descending at least 103 steps.

About accessibility at the museum