Malmö Art Museum
Founded in 1841 , the Malmö Art Museum is one of the leading art museums in Scandinavia. The museum building, built in 1937 , is located in the Malmö Castle complex in Malmö, Scania, in southern Sweden. The museum is governed by the City of Malmö.
Location | Malmö, Scania, Sweden |
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Coordinates | 55°36′36″N 12°59′32″E |
The collections
The museum houses a major collections of Nordic modern and contemporary art, now containing about 40,000 works, covering the period from the 16th century to the present day.[1]
The museum hosts several important collections and historical donations, including the works of Carl Fredrik Hill (1849–1911). The Herman Gotthardt Collection of Nordic modern 20th-century art is an important contribution to the understanding of the early production of Scandinavian modern art. Also in the museum's holdings is a unique collection of Russian fin-de-siècle paintings, acquired at the famous Baltic Exhibition in Malmö in 1914.[2]
The museum has an extensive collection of furniture and handicraft, primarily from southern Sweden.
Exhibitions
The permanent exhibition "From 1500 until Now" shows the historical development and the great variety in Sweden and north Europe of painting, sculpture and applied arts from the Renaissance through to Art Nouveau and up to the present day. It displays a selection of the finest artworks from the collection and interiors from the different periods of style.
- Ester Almqvist
- Ferdinand Fagerlin
- Frans Floris, The Fall of Man (circa 1560)
- Alexander Roslin, Portrait of Princess Natalya Petrovna Galitzine (1977)
- Alexander Roslin, Portrait of Prince Vladimir Golitsyn Borisovtj, 1762
- Amanda Sidvall, The thief of hearts (1884)
- Anders Zorn, Selfportrait (1907)
- Carl Fredrik Hill, Untitled (twilight landscape)
References
- Om Malmö Konstmuseum Malmö stad. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
- Den ryska samlingen Malmö stad. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
External links
- Stay.com
- Theft of Munch painting
- NYTimes: Drawings from the Malmo Art Museum
- Frieze Magazine: Lukas Duwenhögger
- Malmö Art Museum
- Malmö Art Museum within Google Arts & Culture
- Media related to Malmö Konstmuseum at Wikimedia Commons