Visitor Guide
Experience Glacier National Park just minutes from 2026 World Cup in DFW
Sid Richardson Museum in Fort Worth is just a short drive from Arlington, where thousands of fans from around the world will visit this summer for the 2026 FIFA World Cup soccer matches.
The museum’s newest exhibit, Russell’s Retreat: Summers At Glacier National Park, is a rare opportunity to immerse in the Montana wilderness from the heart of downtown Fort Worth.
Beat the heat at Russell’s Retreat
Texas summers are no joke, and luckily the 2026 World Cup Dallas-Fort Worth matches are indoors. Out-of-towners seeking more summer indoor activities near AT&T Stadium can cool off in the Sid Richardson Museum galleries, where the air is crisp and the art showcases ice-capped mountains and frigid waters.
Russell’s Retreat: Summers At Glacier National Park explores a different side of the “Cowboy Artist,” Charles M. Russell, with works made at his summer retreat, Bull Head Lodge, on the southern shores of Lake McDonald in what is now Glacier National Park.
Over the years Russell spent in Glacier, his paintings featuring the struggles between man and nature were set against the alpine peaks of the park’s high country. For the Russells, their guests at Bull Head Lodge, and so many who came before and after them, Glacier would always be more than a landscape — it was, and is, a sanctuary to restore the spirit and preserve the natural beauty of the American West.

An authentic Texas experience
Nestled in historic Sundance Square, Sid Richardson Museum features permanent and special exhibitions of works by the premier Western artists Frederic Remington and Charles M. Russell, reflecting both the romance and reality of the American West. The genre showcases the endurance of the human spirit in rugged circumstances, a quintessentially Western portrayal of a theme recognized around the globe.
Sundance Square is named for the outlaw Sundance Kid, partner of the infamous Butch Cassidy. Their Wild Bunch gang would often travel to Fort Worth when they needed to lay low. Today, the district is pedestrian- and family-friendly, with a plaza of jetted fountains for cooling off, live entertainment, shops, and restaurants.
Along with events at the Fort Worth Stockyards just up the road, Sid Richardson Museum is among free things to do in Fort Worth that offer a truly authentic Texan experience. Both international and domestic travelers looking for things to do during World Cup 2026, whether between matches or making a day of it, should add these quintessential activities to their DFW World Cup visitor guide.




