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National Museum in Kraków opens new European Art Gallery

03.12.2025 08:30
The National Museum in Kraków has opened its new European Art Gallery, a major permanent exhibition presenting more than 120 works created between the 13th and 20th centuries.
Opening of the Gallery of European Art at the National Museum in Kraków in southern Poland.
Opening of the Gallery of European Art at the National Museum in Kraków in southern Poland.Photo: PAP/Łukasz Gągulski

The gallery, which opened to the public on 3 December 2025, showcases highlights of European painting and sculpture from the museum’s diverse collections.

Unusually, the exhibition is arranged in reverse chronological order.

Entering from the museum’s modernist hall, visitors trace European art history backwards, moving from 19th- and 20th-century works towards medieval masterpieces.

The final room features Romanesque-era Spanish Madonnas, among the institution’s most prized objects.

?Już od jutra w MNK Gmach Główny zobaczycie nową ekspozycję stałą - Galerię Sztuki Europejskiej! ? ?Zadaniem nowej...

Opublikowany przez Muzeum Narodowe w Krakowie Wtorek, 2 grudnia 2025

The display brings together works by major artists, including Paolo Veneziano, Lorenzo Lotto, Lavinia Fontana, Pieter Brueghel the Younger, Lucas Cranach the Younger, Luca Giordano, Mattia Preti, Elisabeth Vigée-Lebrun and Maurice de Vlaminck. Sculpture is represented by figures such as Antonio Canova and Gustav Vigeland.

The MNK’s European collection developed largely through donations and legacies, often arriving as parts of larger estates rather than as targeted acquisitions.

As a result, it is both wide-ranging and somewhat accidental in shape. Benefactors included some of Kraków’s most influential collectors, among them Wiktor Osławski, Henryk Bukowski, Konstanty Schmidt-Ciążyński, Ferdynand Bryndza, Edmund Łoziński, Jan Matejko and Feliks “Manggha” Jasieński.

Photo: PAP/Łukasz Gągulski Photo: PAP/Łukasz Gągulski

Others contributed the core collections built over their lifetimes, such as Erazm Barącz and Włodzimierz Łukasiewicz.

Significant holdings also came from the families of Edward Goldstein, Edmund Łoziński, Mieczysław Gąsecki and Count Stanisław Ursyn-Rusiecki, as well as deposits like the notable Tarnowski collection from Dzików.

Additional works entered the museum after the Second World War as property designated “abandoned” or “left behind”.

The exhibition was curated by Miłosz Kargol, Katarzyna Płonka-Bałus, PhD, and Adam Spodaryk, PhD. Katarzyna Pawłowska coordinated the project, with exhibition design by Magdalena Bujak.

Photo: PAP/Łukasz Gągulski Photo: PAP/Łukasz Gągulski


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Source: The National Museum in Kraków