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The Museum of Innocence (Masumiyet Müzesi) is a fantastic museum in the Çukurcuma area of Beyoğlu, Istanbul, Turkey. It’s located in a 19th century mansion on Çukur Cuma Street.

Museum of Innocence
Museum of Innocence

 

Admission

The Museum of Innocence is open daily except Mondays from 10am to 6pm. Tickets are 300₺ for adults (as of December 2023).

An audioguide is available in English, Turkish, or Russian for an additional 10₺ (as of December 2023). I highly recommend the audioguide as it helps to make sense of all the items on display. There’s a short version that skips several of the items and a long version that takes up to two hours. I noticed a few visitors walking around without audioguides and I can’t imagine they got anything worthwhile out of the museum.

 

Story

The Museum of Innocence is unlike any museum I’ve ever visited. It’s actually a companion to the novel The Museum of Innocence by Orhan Pamuk. Pamuk wanted to tell a fictional story using real objects and began collecting several items in the mid-1990s. His idea was to place the items in a museum and write a novel about them.

Boxes of objects
Boxes of objects

The novel was published in 2008 and the museum opened in April 2012. I hadn’t read the novel but heard rave reviews about the museum so I decided to pay a visit. To avoid spoiling it for you, I won’t explain the story in detail here.

 

The Museum

When I first entered the museum, I was greeted by a wall full of cigarettes apparently smoked by Füsun, a character in the novel, over a period of eight years. They were collected by the protagonist, Kemal, who carefully collected and labeled each one. It was quite strange to me and I wasn’t immediately convinced that I would enjoy my visit. At that point, I planned to do only the short audioguide.

Wall of cigarettes at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Wall of cigarettes
Wall of cigarettes at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Wall of cigarettes

Walking upstairs to the next level, I encountered the first boxes containing objects related to different sections of the novel. I pressed the button corresponding to each numbered box and listened carefully. The vivid descriptions quickly drew me into the story and I decided to follow the long version. I ended up enjoying it thoroughly.

First floor
First floor
Box of objects at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Box of objects
Box of objects at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Box of objects

The museum is spread out over three levels of the building. Some of the boxes are incomplete and the audioguide skips these sections. The author plans to finish the incomplete boxes in the future.

Second floor
Second floor
Unfinished boxes
Unfinished boxes

 

Kemal’s Bedroom

Finally, on the top floor is the supposed room of the protagonist, Kemal Basmacı. A sign indicates Kemal lived in the bedroom from 2000 until his death on April 12, 2007, and Pamuk would visit him occasionally to listen to his story.

Kemal's room
Kemal’s room
"Let everyone know, I lived a very happy life" - Kemal Basmacı
“Let everyone know, I lived a very happy life” – Kemal Basmacı

The room includes a display containing several versions of The Museum of Innocence translated into different languages as well as notes and sketches by the author.

Copies of The Museum of Innocence from different countries
Copies of The Museum of Innocence from different countries
Notes by Orhan Pamuk at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Notes by Orhan Pamuk
Sketches by Orhan Pamuk at the Museum of Innocence in Istanbul, Turkey
Sketches by Orhan Pamuk

 

Conclusion

Overall, I would visit the museum again. I would like to see the boxes that were unfinished at the time of my visit. Also, I would recommend the museum to anyone looking for a unique experience in Istanbul. It will quench the thirst of anyone who enjoys listening to a good story, and will do it in a way that appeals to the senses.

Author

Owner of Paisadventure. World traveler. Chicago sports lover. Living in Colombia.

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