In the historical centre of Corella, near the Plaza de la Merced at the end of Calle Cañete, surrounded by mansion houses and other buildings of interest such as the Church of San Miguel and the Palace of Corella, you will find de Arrese Fundation, the Museum of Sacred Art. It occupies the former Convent of the Incarnation which was ordered to be built in the 17th century by the illustrious Corella resident Pedro de Baigorri, where the Tourist Office now stands. At the end of the 17th century, a group of cloistered Benedictine nuns arrived at the convent, which continued to be inhabited for three centuries. In 1970 José Luis Arrese and his wife Maria Teresa Saéz de Heredia bought the abbey and transferred part of their art collection there to transform it into the museum we know today. It houses a prolific collection of artistic works including canvases, sculptures and objects covering a broad chronological period.