Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1989, the Swiss art historian and curator Jean-Christophe Ammann [6] moved from the Kunsthalle Basel to Frankfurt am Main and opened the new Museum für Moderne Kunst (MMK) Frankfurt am Main there on 6 June 1991. With a new exhibition model, the Change of Scene, which took place a total of 20 times with the help of private sponsors (Change ...
The Kunsthalle and preserved Ancient Roman ruins (with a hypocaust), seen from the east, before the beginning of the Dom-Römer-Project 2009. The Schirn Kunsthalle is a Kunsthalle in Frankfurt, Germany, located in the old city between the Römer and the Frankfurt Cathedral; [3] it is part of Frankfurt's Museumsufer (Museum Riverbank).
The Städel was founded in 1817, [12] and is one of the oldest museums in Frankfurt. The founding followed a bequest by the Frankfurt banker and art patron Johann Friedrich Städel (1728–1816), who left his house, art collection and fortune with the request in his will that the institute be set up.
Art museums. Albrecht-Dürer-Haus (Albrecht Dürer's House); Kunsthalle Nürnberg (Gallery of Contemporary Art); Kunsthaus im KunstKulturQuartier (Art house at the art and culture area)
German Open: Gegenwartskunst in Deutschland, Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg; Saman taivaan alla: Taidetta kaupungissa, 1999–2000: Under samma himmel/ Under the Same Sky, Kiasma, Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki; To the People of the City of the Euro, Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt am Main
Städel Museum, Frankfurt-am-Main Portrait of chamber singer Karl Wallenreiter c. 1861 oil on canvas 77 × 63 Alte Nationalgalerie, Berlin Self portrait 1862 oil on mahogany 39.5 × 31 Kunstmuseum Basel: Wandering light 1862 oil on canvas 81 × 59 Museum of Georg Schaefer, Schweinfurt, Germany Portrait of the artist Franz von Lenbach 1862
The Museum Angewandte Kunst (MAK) is located in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and is part of Frankfurt's Museumsufer [2] (Museum Riverbank). The alternating exhibitions recount tales of cultural values and changing living conditions.
The city of Frankfurt acquired the building in 1908 and devoted it to the sculpture collection. [1] The first director of the Skulpturensammlung der Städtischen Galerie Frankfurt was Georg Swarzenski . [7] [8] In 1909, Paul Kanold built a gallery wing extension to the villa, that was completed in 1990 by Scheffler and Warschauer. [9] [10]