There is something quietly extraordinary about walking onto the campus of Gonzaga University on a weekday morning, when the maple-lined paths are still dewy and the Spokane River glitters just beyond the bluff. Most visitors to Spokane drive right past the university gates without a second thought, and that is genuinely their loss. Because tucked inside those grounds, steps from the river’s edge, sits one of the most inviting and underappreciated art museums in the entire Pacific Northwest: the Jundt Art Museum.
The building itself earns a second look before you even step inside. Designed with soaring glass walls and clean contemporary lines, the Jundt feels like a confident conversation between modern architecture and the natural beauty surrounding it. From certain angles you can see the treeline of the Spokane River corridor framed right through the gallery windows, which feels intentional and poetic in equal measure. This is a place that takes beauty seriously from the outside in.
Admission is free. Let that sink in for a moment. One of the most thoughtfully curated small art museums in Washington State — free, every week, to the general public. That alone should have you reaching for your keys.
Inside, the permanent collection spans a remarkable range, from Renaissance-era prints and drawings to twentieth-century American paintings and a dedicated gallery of Dale Chihuly glass works that will stop you cold. Chihuly, who has deep Pacific Northwest roots, is represented here with pieces that feel alive under the museum’s natural light. If you have only ever seen his work in photographs, you are not prepared for how differently the glass breathes and shifts in person. It is one of those experiences that quietly recalibrates your sense of what art can do.
Beyond the permanent collection, the Jundt rotates thoughtful temporary exhibitions throughout the year, often spotlighting regional artists alongside nationally recognized names. The curatorial team here clearly believes that a university museum should be genuinely surprising, not just educational, and they succeed. On a recent visit I caught an exhibition of contemporary printmaking that I would have happily paid a gallery admission to see anywhere else in the country.
The museum is located in the heart of the Gonzaga campus in Spokane’s Gonzaga neighborhood, just north of downtown near the river. Parking is generally easy on weekends, and the campus itself is worth a leisurely walk before or after your visit. There is a coffee shop nearby, and the riverside trail makes for an ideal cooldown stroll once your imagination has been sufficiently stirred.
Whether you are an art devotee or simply someone who appreciates beautiful spaces and genuine curation, the Jundt Art Museum is one of those Spokane experiences that makes you feel like you found something real. Plan for at least ninety minutes, go on a quiet weekday morning if you can, and prepare to leave a little more inspired than when you arrived.