
Eye Filmmuseum - Amsterdam
Sep 28, 2025 · On the lower level and throughout Eye we illuminate various aspects of the world of the moving image. Learn about how film developed, from its early beginnings to the present …
Plan your visit - Eye Filmmuseum
Eye Filmmuseum is located on IJpromenade, a cycling and pedestrian path where mopeds and scooters are not allowed. Please remember to park them before the bridge across the canal.
All programmes - Eye Filmmuseum
Eye presents a complete overview of Dick Maas’ work. With films such as De lift, Amsterdamned, Flodder and Sint, the filmmaker lured millions of Dutch people to the cinema.
About Eye - Eye Filmmuseum
Eye is responsible for the Netherlands’ film collection: storing this in a sustainable way, making it accessible, providing context, and keeping it alive. We are aware of the gaps in our collection …
Exhibitions - Eye Filmmuseum
Eye hosts the first Dutch exhibition on Turkish filmmaker Nuri Bilge Ceylan, showcasing his award-winning films and rarely seen landscape photographs together for the first time.
Explore our collection - Eye Filmmuseum
The Eye collection dates back to 1946, when the first predecessor of Eye was founded: the Nederlands Historisch Filmarchief. In 1952, this became the Dutch Filmmuseum, and since …
Permanent exhibition | Eye Filmmuseum
Eye Filmmuseum offers guided tours in Dutch Sign Language (NGT) through the permanent exhibition. Visitors can also watch videos in NGT on their smartphone by scanning QR codes …
Eye International Conference 2025 | Eye Filmmuseum
May 28, 2025 · The Eye International Conference 2025 will take place in Amsterdam from Sunday 25th to Wednesday 28th May 2025. The official opening of the Eye International Conference …
Discover the buildings - Eye Filmmuseum
A day at Eye Eye highlights film in numerous ways: by presenting four annual exhibitions, screening films in our four film theatres, offering workshops for children and through our …
The History of Eye Filmmuseum
Eye Filmmuseum is now much more than a museum concerned only with film history. Director Sandra den Hamer describes it as ‘a museum for film and the art of the moving image’.