The ancient Indus collection at the National Museum of India in New Delhi is the best way to see the most and finest objects from this civilization in the real world. A recent visit in the recently revamped galleries (in 2018, only half-open) allowed me to finally meet the "dancing girl", and she is even more full of character in person. Photographs don't do her justice. One reason the Delhi collection is the best is that there are so many objects from Harappa, Mohenjo-daro and Chanhu-daro, still the best excavated Indus cities, plus new finds from Dholavira, Lothal, Kalibangan and all manner of post-Independence Indian sites, so that one had a more complete picture of, say, large pots or ringstones than most museums can show. There are problems though – far too little text, for example – and one looks forward to the day when Indus objects are displayed as well as, say, those in Humayun's Tomb Museum a few kilometers away.