Dutch Masters, but moving.
At Fabrique des Lumières, you watch Vermeer, van Gogh, Rembrandt, and Mondriaan turn into light and sound. I love the scale, especially the 3,800m² of projected worlds, and I also love how the music is built to match what you’re seeing. One thing to plan around: the show is offered only in the first and last time slot, and it’s shown just once—so being late really matters.
You’ll enter a converted industrial hall in Westergas Park, where the walls can rise to 17 meters and the art swells across the room like you’ve stepped inside a painting. Doors open 15 minutes before your booked slot, lockers are included, and the whole experience starts exactly on time and ends soon after your final segment.
In This Article
- Key highlights you’ll feel right away
- Fabrique des Lumières and the Dutch Masters premise
- Where it is: Westergas Park setup and what to expect when you arrive
- Timed entry rules that actually affect your day
- The show experience: walking through 3,800m² of projected Dutch Masters
- The Mondriaan segment and the neoplasticism finale
- What’s included with your ticket (and what isn’t)
- How long it takes and how to plan your Amsterdam day
- Best ways to enjoy it (without ruining the magic)
- Price and value: is $21 really fair for what you get?
- Who should book this and who should skip it
- A quick practical checklist before you go
- Should you book Fabrique des Lumières Dutch Masters?
- FAQ
- Where is Fabrique des Lumières located?
- How much does the Dutch Masters ticket cost?
- How long is the experience?
- What time slots are available for the Dutch Masters exhibition?
- When should I arrive for my booked time?
- Is the exhibition shown more than once per day?
- What is included with the ticket?
- Is a guide included?
- Is it wheelchair accessible?
- What items are not allowed?
Key highlights you’ll feel right away

- Huge projected canvas across 3,800m², with walls up to 17m high
- Dutch Masters brought to life through synchronized light projections and music
- A Mondriaan follow-up that tracks his move toward neoplasticism
- A museum-style break from the usual Amsterdam routine: art + sound in one show
- Locker use included, so you can travel light inside the exhibition
- Lots of room to wander between rooms and viewing spots, not just a single screen
Fabrique des Lumières and the Dutch Masters premise

Amsterdam has no shortage of art. But this one doesn’t ask you to stand quietly and stare at brushstrokes. At Fabrique des Lumières, the Dutch Masters are presented as motion—light projections synchronized with music—so you experience the paintings like an atmosphere, not a static image.
The concept is simple: the originals inspire the show, but your viewpoint changes. You’re not just viewing Dutch Masters; you’re “inside” the scenes. That’s why even people who normally skip museums often end up enjoying this. The show works on your senses first, then your brain catches up.
Also, the ticket is timed-entry. That sounds ordinary until you learn the catch: your exhibition plays only once at your time slot, and it starts exactly when you booked. So you’re not going to drift in whenever you feel like it. You’re either ready, or you’re late.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Amsterdam
Where it is: Westergas Park setup and what to expect when you arrive

Fabrique des Lumières sits in Westergas Park on the Amsterdam side of North Holland, in an industrial-style building. The venue matters because it shapes the mood. You’re walking into a tall, warehouse-like space designed for scale, sound, and controlled lighting.
Plan to arrive directly at Fabrique des Lumières, not around the corner at a café and then wander in. Doors open 15 minutes before the exhibition begins, and the show starts exactly at the time on your ticket. One practical tip: if you’re combining this with a busy day of tram/bike hopping or you hit traffic on the way in, give yourself buffer time to handle lockers and find your entrance area.
Inside, you’ll be in a room with serious projection capacity. The walls reach up to 17 meters, and you’ll see how that translates into wall-to-wall artwork. It’s not a small room with a neat screen effect. It’s the kind of scale that makes you stop and look up, even when you think you’re paying attention only to what’s in front of you.
Timed entry rules that actually affect your day

This is the part I want you to take seriously, because it’s where most “this was great but I missed part” frustrations happen.
Here’s what you must know:
- The Dutch Masters exhibition is available only during the first and last time slot of the day.
- Doors open 15 minutes before your exhibition time.
- The exhibition is shown only once, and it starts exactly at your booked time slot.
- After your show ends, the venue closes afterwards—so don’t plan to turn it into an all-evening hangout.
So what should you do? Aim to arrive soon after doors open. That gives you time to:
- check in smoothly,
- use the locker (included),
- settle your spot before the show begins.
If you like a slow travel pace, this timed structure is still fine—you just need to build your schedule backward from your show time. Think of the show as the main event, not a casual stop.
The show experience: walking through 3,800m² of projected Dutch Masters
The main event is a multisensory, room-by-room journey built around the Dutch Masters. You’ll see themes and masterpieces associated with artists like Vermeer, van Gogh, and Rembrandt, and the show uses projection mapping across large surfaces so the art seems to move with the soundtrack.
What makes it special isn’t only the visuals. It’s the way the show changes your position and your attention. In one moment you’re studying a scene; in the next, the room transforms and the artwork expands around you. That’s why people often describe it as feeling emotional, almost like stepping into another world.
You’ll also notice the production choices:
- The projections are synchronized with music, so your eyes and ears get a consistent signal about what matters next.
- The experience is presented in separate areas, which keeps it from turning into one long, unbroken screen moment.
- There’s room to sit or watch from different angles depending on what you prefer at that moment.
One caution: if you tend to get cold easily, take that seriously. Some visitors report that there isn’t much comfortable seating and that people may sit on the floor for parts of the show. If you’re the type who feels chilled in a museum lobby, you might want to wear layers.
The Mondriaan segment and the neoplasticism finale

After the main Dutch Masters portion, you’ll get a short program dedicated to Mondriaan. The show follows his artistic evolution as he moved away from traditional painting rules and helped pioneer a more visionary style connected with neoplasticism.
This matters because Mondriaan’s work can feel abstract if you only see it in a museum setting. Here, the format makes the change in style easier to grasp. You’re not just looking at a famous composition behind glass. You’re watching the ideas unfold through the show’s visual language—color, shape, and rhythm—paired with sound.
It also gives the experience a nice arc. You start with familiar Dutch Masters storytelling and recognizable mastery, then you finish with a style-shift toward modern art thinking. If you’ve already seen works by these artists in museums, this ending can still feel fresh, because you’re experiencing them through motion and staging rather than a gallery route.
What’s included with your ticket (and what isn’t)

Your ticket covers:
- Timed entry to the Dutch Masters at Fabrique des Lumières
- Locker use inside
A guide is not included. In practice, that means you’ll rely on the show itself and any in-house presentation to provide context. If you love reading wall text, you might notice there’s less of the traditional museum commentary format. But the upside is that the show is designed to make you feel the art without needing a lecture.
Also included in the ticket experience:
- Skip the ticket line, which can save stress when you’re following a timed schedule.
How long it takes and how to plan your Amsterdam day

The experience is listed as 1 day, but the real time you’ll spend here depends on your pace and how quickly you move through rooms. Many visitors describe it as roughly an hour for the show experience, with the total time including locker check-in and walking between spaces.
Because you only get one shot at your booked slot, treat Fabrique des Lumières like a fixed appointment:
- Put it on your calendar first,
- then build museum hopping around it,
- and keep the time buffer for late arrivals.
If you’re trying to squeeze in other attractions nearby, you’ll have a safer day if you schedule something lighter either before or after, rather than stacking tightly timed museum entries back-to-back.
Best ways to enjoy it (without ruining the magic)
You don’t need to be a lifelong art expert to enjoy this. You just need the right approach.
Here’s how I’d set you up for a great experience:
- Arrive early enough to use your locker and settle without rushing.
- Dress for the room’s temperature. Some people find it cold, especially if they’re sitting for portions of the show.
- Pick a viewing spot and give yourself permission to watch, not multitask.
- If you’re sensitive to visual effects, take that seriously. The experience is not suitable for people with epilepsy, based on the provided information.
If you’re traveling with someone who usually skips art, this is often the kind of stop they don’t regret—because it’s as much about the music and show rhythm as it is about paintings.
Price and value: is $21 really fair for what you get?

At about $21 per person, this ticket prices the experience as a special show rather than a long museum day. So you’re not buying “hours of galleries.” You’re buying a produced experience with projection technology, music, and a timed slot.
For me, the value comes from three things:
- Scale and production: the projections cover a huge space (3,800m², walls up to 17m).
- Time efficiency: it’s a focused outing, not a half-day slog.
- One-ticket convenience: lockers are included, and you skip the ticket line.
Is it perfect? If you want lots of quiet reading time or deep curatorial interpretation in the traditional sense, you might feel the price doesn’t buy you that. But if your goal is to experience Dutch Masters in a modern, sensory format, the cost-to-experience ratio feels solid.
Think of it like live performance with art themes, not like a standard gallery ticket.
Who should book this and who should skip it
This is a great fit if you:
- love modern production, soundtracks, and large visual shows,
- want an art experience that’s accessible even if you’re not an “art person,”
- plan a compact day in Amsterdam and want something impactful without a long museum route,
- want a second viewpoint on famous works you’ve already seen in museums.
It’s probably not the best fit if you:
- need flexible timing on site (because your show starts exactly at your slot),
- can’t handle cold well if you end up sitting on the floor for parts,
- have epilepsy, since the experience is not suitable.
A quick practical checklist before you go
- Choose a time slot carefully, since the Dutch Masters show is only in the first and last slot.
- Be early enough for locker use and settling—doors open 15 minutes before.
- Remember the show starts exactly at your booked time, and it plays only once.
- Wear layers if you’re sensitive to cool indoor spaces.
- Keep your bags simple: pets, baby strollers, and luggage/large bags are not allowed.
Should you book Fabrique des Lumières Dutch Masters?
If you want Dutch Masters in a way that feels like a live show—big scale, music-driven, and designed to pull you into the artwork—then yes, book it. The main reason is straightforward: this isn’t just a new way to look at paintings. It’s a new way to experience them in motion, in sound, and across a huge room.
I’d only hesitate if your style of art enjoyment is mostly about reading details at a calm pace, or if you know you’re going to struggle with the timed, one-shot schedule. If that’s you, pick your slot carefully and plan your day around it.
Bottom line: at roughly $21, you’re paying for production value and an experience that’s hard to recreate on your own at home. For many people, it ends up being one of the most memorable art stops in Amsterdam, precisely because it doesn’t behave like a museum.
FAQ
Where is Fabrique des Lumières located?
It’s located in Westergas Park in Amsterdam.
How much does the Dutch Masters ticket cost?
The price is listed as $21 per person.
How long is the experience?
It’s listed as lasting 1 day, and the exhibition is a timed show that starts at your booked slot.
What time slots are available for the Dutch Masters exhibition?
The Dutch Masters exhibition is only available during the first and last time slot of the day.
When should I arrive for my booked time?
Doors open 15 minutes before the exhibition. The show starts exactly at your booked time slot.
Is the exhibition shown more than once per day?
No. The exhibition is shown only once, and it starts exactly at your booked time slot.
What is included with the ticket?
Your ticket includes timed entry to Dutch Masters at Fabrique des Lumières and locker use.
Is a guide included?
No, a guide is not included.
Is it wheelchair accessible?
Yes, wheelchair access is listed as available.
What items are not allowed?
Pets, baby strollers, and luggage or large bags are not allowed.
More Tickets in Amsterdam
More Tour Reviews in Amsterdam
Not for you? Here's more nearby things to do in Amsterdam we have reviewed
- Zaanse Schans Windmills, Clogs and Dutch Cheese Small-Group Tour from Amsterdam
★ 4.5 · 2,369 reviews


























