#heritage

Thursday, June 22, 2017, 6:00 PM - Sunday, January 14, 2018

  • Thursday, June 22, 2017, 6:00 PM - Sunday, January 14, 2018
>

The collections of the National Museum in Krakow, founded in 1879 and largely based on earlier private collections, are a centuries-old record of Poland’s national memory. The exhibition #heritage at the museum’s Main Building (from 23 June), opening ahead of the 41st Session of the UNESCO World Heritage Centre held in Kraków in July, attempts to interpret the museum’s collections and define Polish identity in 2017 AD. The exhibition of around 650 items, divided into categories of geography, language, citizens and customs, presents artworks and archive materials alongside other tangible records of the past.

We will see works by the great visionaries of the 19th and the begining of the 20th centuries Jan Matejko, Stanisław Wyspiański and Jacek Malczewski, artists of the interwar avant-garde including Władysław Strzemiński, artists of the communist period such as Andrzej Wróblewski, and contemporary artists. There are examples of arts and crafts, costumes, coins and banknotes, documents, early texts, and maps of the Republic of Poland and other parts of the world where Polish voyagers, discoverers, artists and architects have made their mark.

“The exhibition is a treasure trove of memories which we visit to inspire us in contemporary times and, most of all, to help us contemplate the kind of heritage we have been bequeathed and how best to add the next chapter in our country’s history,” says Andrzej Szczerski, vice-director of the National Museum in Krakow and curator of the exhibition. (Dorota Dziunikowska, Karnet" monthly)

The Main Building

al. 3 Maja 1

The central phenomena of the Polish art of the 20th and 21st century, the history of Polish weaponry and uniforms, a gallery of crafts, and a dozen major temporary exhibitions each year.

The quickly expanding collection of the National Museum, set up in 1879, soon needed space that Kraków did not have at that time. That is why the idea to erect a new building that at the same time would commemorate the many years of efforts to regain Poland’s independence was born early in the 20th century. Immediately after the end of the First World War, already in free Poland, funds for the construction of an appropriate seat began to be raised. The construction of the building by the imposing Aleje Trzech Wieszczów, staked out just two decades earlier, began in 1934. Today, the National Museum in Kraków boasts several branches, with no fewer than three permanent galleries in the Main Building alone. Deposited on the ground floor are the collections of militaria: the exhibition Arms and Uniforms in Poland (gallery closed until further notice) presents the history of the Polish military from the Middle Ages to the Second World War. The Gallery of Decorative Arts boasts collections of fabrics, goldsmithry, glass, ceramics, furniture, musical instruments, and Judaica that let the visitor trace changes in style from the early Middle Ages to the 20th century. The Polish Art Gallery presents the chronology and key tendencies in painting, sculpture and printmaking as created by the Polish artists of the 20th and 21st century. The largest temporary exhibitions of the National Museum in Kraków are organised in specially designed halls.

Tickets to permanent galleries: normal PLN 32, concessions PLN 25, family PLN 64, admission free to permanent exhibitions on Tuesday

OK We use cookies to facilitate the use of our services. If you do not want cookies to be saved on your hard drive, change the settings of your browser.