“The Natural History Museum,” created by Paul Delvaux in 1943, is a symbolic painting belonging to the Surrealism art movement and measures 105 x 69 cm. The artwork displays three human skeletons standing within what appears to be an interior of a museum or a study room, evocative of a setting that might house natural history exhibits. The muted, earthy tones and dim lighting create an eerie, solemn atmosphere which is a hallmark of Surrealist aesthetics. The meticulous detailing of the skeletal figures juxtaposed with the wooden floorboards and background walls captures a sense of stillness and contemplation, evoking themes related to mortality, the passage of time, and the convergence between life and death.