Nashville – Arts & Culture

In recent years, the world has discovered what locals knew all along: Nashville is so much more than a country music mecca. While institutions like the Ryman Auditorium and Station Inn pay fitting tribute to the city’s musical heritage, local culture also is enhanced by visual and performing arts, architecture, renowned museums, historic landmarks and more.

  • Nashville is home to countless music venues, including several devoted to rock, jazz, pop, Americana and soul. In addition to the larger stages downtown, several legendary venues—including EXIT/IN and The End—are within easy walking distance of Vanderbilt’s campus.
  • Housed in a marble building that once served as the city’s main post office, The Frist Art Museum is at the heart of Nashville’s visual arts community. As a non-collecting museum, the Frist focuses on hosting traveling exhibitions from around the world, as well as educational programming and community events.
red wall art
Frist Art Museum
Aerial of the Ryman
Ryman Auditorium
  • In addition to its 55-acre grounds, Cheekwood Estate & Gardens houses a comprehensive collection of American art, including 600 paintings and more than 5,000 prints, drawings and photographs.
cheek wood

Cheekwood Estate & Gardens

Belle Meade
  • Just a few blocks away from the beloved Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, the doors recently opened to the National Museum of African American Music, the nation’s first institution dedicated to Black musicians’ innumerable contributions to our nation’s soundtrack. Vanderbilt is proud to serve as an official partner to the museum, which is committed to education and spurring meaningful discussions across and beyond the Nashville community.