Thirteen Pinup-Related Art Museums of America to Visit!
What should you include on your next vacation or road-trip? Here is a coast-to-coast guide to vintage glamour, illustration, and mid-century allure found within the hallowed halls of museums.
Pinup art – celebrated through artists like Alberto Vargas and Gil Elvgren – is a defining visual language of 20th-century America. Few institutions are exclusively devoted to pinups. But many museums and specialty galleries across the United States preserve and exhibit this vibrant blend of illustration, fashion, and cultural history.
Below are ten standout destinations where pinup art lives on.
1. The Hollywood Museum
Located in the heart of Hollywood, this museum showcases costumes, photographs, and memorabilia from the golden age of cinema. Many exhibits highlight iconic pinup figures such as Marilyn Monroe and Betty Grable, whose imagery defined wartime and 1950’s pinup culture.
1660 N. Highland Ave.
Hollywood, CA 90028
(323) 464-7776
https://thehollywoodmuseum.com/
2. Museum of Sex
This bold institution explores sexuality in cultural history, including exhibitions like “Vamps & Virgins: The Evolution of American Pinup Photography.” It traces the transformation of pinup imagery from the 19th century through the mid-20th century. This museum has featured exhibitions like “The Evolution of American Pinup Photography 1860–1960.” It contextualizes pinup art within broader themes of sexuality, media, and cultural change.
Museum of Sex | NYC
233 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016
(212) 689-6337
https://www.museumofsex.com/
3. The Burlesque Hall of Fame
A must-see for pinup enthusiasts, this museum celebrates burlesque performers whose aesthetics overlap heavily with pinup art. Expect glittering costumes, vintage posters, and archival photography. Closely tied to pinup culture – especially the glamour and theatrical tease artists embodied by icons like Bettie Page.
1027 S Main St #110
Las Vegas, NV 89101
(888) 661-6465
https://burlesquehall.com/
4. Cartoon Art Museum
The museum focuses on comics and illustration, this museum often highlights stylized female figures, exaggerated poses, and bold linework—visual elements shared with classic pinup art.
781 Beach Street, Fl 1
San Francisco, CA 94109
415-CARTOON (227-8666)
https://www.cartoonart.org/
5. Spencer Museum of Art
This university museum has hosted exhibitions of original Vargas pinups—those iconic “Varga Girls” that became cultural symbols during World War II.
1301 Mississippi Street
Lawrence, KS 66045
785-864-4710
https://spencerart.ku.edu/
6. Norman Rockwell Museum
This museum houses the largest collection of works by Norman Rockwell, whose idealized figures and storytelling compositions heavily influenced the visual language of American pinup art. The museum also features works by illustrators like Maxfield Parrish and J. C. Leyendecker—key figures in early glamour and advertising imagery. While not strictly pinup, Rockwell’s illustrations share stylistic DNA with American pinup art—idealized figures, storytelling, and magazine culture.
9 Glendale Road
Stockbridge, MA 01262
413-298-4100
https://www.nrm.org
7. The Museum of Arts and Design
MAD explores craft, fashion, and design – including exhibitions on mid-century fashion and aesthetics closely tied to pinup imagery.
Jerome and Simona Chazen Building
2 Columbus Circle, NYC, 10019
212.299.7777
https://madmuseum.org/
8. The Broad
A contemporary art museum where modern artists reinterpret themes of femininity, glamour, and image-making—often echoing and critiquing classic pinup aesthetics.
221 S. Grand Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90012
213-232-6200
https://www.thebroad.org/
9. National WWII Museum
Pinup art flourished during WWII as morale-boosting imagery. This museum displays aircraft nose art and posters featuring classic pinup figures tied to wartime culture including pinups used to boost morale among soldiers. Artwork influenced by artists like George Petty appears in historical exhibits.
945 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
504-528-1944
https://www.nationalww2museum.org/
10. The Rockwell Museum
A Smithsonian Affiliate museum featuring American illustration and visual storytelling traditions closely tied to pinup-era aesthetics—especially mid-century advertising and magazine art.
111 Cedar St.
Corning, NY 14830
(607) 937-5386
https://rockwellmuseum.org/
11. The Andy Warhol Museum
The Andy Warhol Museum is a global destination for scholarship and learning about Warhol’s life, art, and relevance to contemporary culture. Warhol’s early commercial illustrations in the 1950s reflect the glamour and stylization of pinup culture before his pop art fame.
117 Sandusky Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15212
412-237-8300
https://www.warhol.org/
12. Kinsey Institute Gallery
Part of Indiana University, this gallery holds archival photographs and artworks reflecting evolving ideals of beauty, sexuality, and body image—many overlapping with early pinup traditions.
Beebe Gallery at the Kinsey Institute
Lindley Hall 305
150 S Woodlawn Ave.
Bloomington, IN 47405
https://kinseyinstitute.org/collections/index.html
13. National Museum of American Illustration
Located in a grand Gilded Age mansion, this museum preserves original works by the illustrators who directly shaped pinup culture. Expect iconic magazine covers, advertising art, and romanticized figures that influenced artists like Gil Elvgren.
492 Bellevue Avenue
Newport, RI 02840
(401) 851-8949
https://americanillustration.org/
✨ Final Thoughts
Pinup art isn’t confined to a single museum category –it lives at the intersection of illustration, fashion, cinema, and cultural history. From Hollywood glamour archives to contemporary reinterpretations, these institutions collectively preserve the legacy of American pinup imagery.
Whether you’re researching for a book, building a visual archive, or planning a themed road trip, these museums offer a rich, real-world journey into one of America’s most iconic art forms. Remember, though, that museums change exhibitions and displays all the time. Make sure to check out what the current exhibitions are, or, just show up and be surprised.
News About Pinuo Art MuseumsMoo-see-umWhen I was very young in a time before i-phones, streaming, CD players and video screens, etc., were found in cars – we were lucky to have radios – on vacation road trips my Dad made up games to amuse my older brother and me – one such was the moo-see-um game which, should not surprise you, consisted of being the first to spot and shout “I see a cow” along the highway, or a horse or a deer which morphed into car state license plates, billboards, shaving cream signs and the like. Games would break up when we stopped to eat packed meals or enter a diner plus naps, snacks and reading comic books… A little older I remember my Dad taking us to the zoo with its monkeyhouse, polar bears, penguins, elephants and giraffes, then there were trips to the Natural History Museum with stuffed mountain lions, buffalos and vultures, dioramas of early man, dinosaur bones and cases of gemstones and minerals, followed up with Art Museums with Millets, Monets, Van Goghs, Titians and other great artists’ works… Imagine my delight on the day of my realization that on those early trips, my Dad was making a punnish joke… for his own inner amusement. ©2026 Carl Scott Harker, author of
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