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The Croatian Museum of Naïve Art (Croatian: Hrvatski muzej naivne umjetnosti) is a fine art museum in Zagreb, Croatia dedicated to the work of naïve artists of the 20th century. The museum holdings consist of over 1,900 works of art - paintings , sculptures , drawings and prints , mainly by Croatians but also by other well-known international ...
Situated in the historical centre of Zagreb close to the Green Horseshoe system of city parks, the neoclassical museum building dating from the second half of the 19th century is part of the typical urban architecture of Zagreb's Lower Town. It was built in 1896 as a complex of school buildings.
The Art pavilion in Zagreb (Croatian: Umjetnički paviljon u Zagrebu) is an art gallery in Zagreb, Croatia. The pavilion is located on the Lenuci Horseshoe , Lower town area of the city, south of Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square , on the northern side of the King Tomislav Square which flanks the Zagreb Central Station .
The Strossmayer Gallery of Old Masters opened in November 1884, named after its founder, Josip Juraj Strossmayer, the bishop of Đakovo.The Academy itself, with the bishop as patron, had been founded in 1866 and had moved into its specially built premises in the Zrinevac park in 1880, with a floor reserved to house the bishop's art collection.
On Tuesday around 9:40 a.m. on 12 June 2024, on the south side of Zagreb's Mark's Square, a 57-year-old doused himself in gasoline and lit himself on fire. The male person who set himself on fire on St. Mark's Square in Zagreb and was treated at the Traumatology Clinic of the KBC Sisters of Mercy in the intensive care unit where he later died ...
The arena was built in 1987, to be used at the 1987 Summer Universiade and was then known as the Cibona Sports Centre (Croatian: Sportski centar Cibona).On 4 October 1993, it was renamed after the late former NBA player and basketball Hall of Famer, Dražen Petrović, a former Cibona Zagreb star.
The district is located in the central part of the city and, according to the 2011 census, it has 30,962 inhabitants [1] spread over 10.19 km 2 (3.93 sq mi). [ 2 ] Gornji Grad–Medveščak is a district with a high number of historic sites and tourist attractions.
The first tram line was opened on September 32, 1891, setting off a vital part of the Zagreb mass transit system. Zagreb today features an extensive tram network with 15 day and 4 night lines running over 117 km (73 mi) of tracks through 255 stations and transporting almost 500,000 passengers per day.