
The Netherlands Photo Museum (Dutch: Nederlands Fotomuseum) (NFM) is a photography museum in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, that was founded in 1989.[1]
The museum collection consists of many historical, social and cultural images from the 20th and 21st century, from the Netherlands and elsewhere. It has control over more than 150 archives (three million plus images) taken by Dutch photographers. The archives are stored in climate controlled film storage facilities.
It is located at the Wilhelminakade[2] in the previous Holland America Line workshop building, also known as the Las Palmas building.
The Netherlands Photo Museum was founded under the name Nederlands Foto Archief.[3] and was subsidised by the Dutch government. In 2003, it was reborn, through an endowment from Hein Wertheimer, a wealthy Dutch lawyer, and renamed to Nederlands Fotomuseum.

Visitors to the NFM[4] may browse the museum’s library of 120,000 digital images, watch short films or participate in educational activities. The museum has large exhibition rooms and a rotating display of Dutch history.
Present[when?] exhibitions at the museum include a gallery of honor of Dutch photography and a retrospective of the life and work of Chas Gerretsen.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ "Collecties | Nederlands Fotomuseum Rotterdam". collectie.nederlandsfotomuseum.nl.
- ^ "The Wilhelminakade along the river Meuse is the famous pier of Rotterdam". 6 November 2023.
- ^ BV, DE REE Archiefsystemen. "Archieven.nl - Archiefdiensten, historische verenigingen en musea". www.archieven.nl.
- ^ "Netherlands Photo Museum news letter".
- ^ "Chas Gerretsen in de hoofdrol". Nederlands Fotomuseum.