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  • The Tessin Lecture 2019: Anna Ottani Cavina, Inventing the Landscape

    Anna Ottani Cavina is Professor Emeritus of Art History, University of Bologna. In this year’s Tessin Lecture she will talk about Inventing the Landscape: The Origin of Outdoor Painting in Italy in the Early Nineteenth Century, the rise of plein air when artists abandoned their studios and took to painting straight from nature.

  • Nationalmuseum – one year and one million visits later

    Since reopening last year, Nationalmuseum has become a success with visitors. In just one year, the museum has had more than one million visits, which is around three times more than before the renovation took place.

  • New acquisition: Verner Åkerman’s sculpture of Pierre Louis Alexandre

    Nationalmuseum has recently acquired a sculpture in terracotta by Verner Åkerman depicting Pierre Louis Alexandre. Pierre Louis Alexandre is primarily known as a model at the Academy of Fine Arts in the latter part of the 1800s and there are many surviving studies of him. However, the acquired sculpture is the only one of its kind known today.

  • Hella Jongerius – Breathing Colour at Nationalmuseum

    The exhibition Hella Jongerius – Breathing Colour opens at Nationalmuseum in Sweden on October 17th. Internationally renowned star designer, Hella Jongerius displays her many years of artistic research into colour, light and materiality.

  • Alexander Tallén receives this year’s Young Applied Artists award

    The 2019 Young Applied Artists goes to the ceramist Alexander Tallén from Stockholm. The scholarship is worth SEK 100,000 and is being presented by the Bengt Julin Fund, administered by the Friends of Nationalmuseum, at a ceremony which will take place on 21 November.

  • Nationalmuseum acquires two Flemish masterpieces

    Nationalmuseum has acquired two important oil paintings by Frans Francken the Younger and Daniel Seghers, both influential artists in 17th-century Antwerp, the Golden Age of Flemish art.

  • Exhibition about 1989 at Nationalmuseum this autumn

    This autumn, Nationalmuseum features an exhibition on one of the most dramatic moments in history – the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. The exhibition, which opens on 5 September, takes a broad look at what happened within the visual culture during the upheavals of 1989.

  • New acquisition: Painting by the French painter Coupin de la Couperie

    Nationalmuseum recently acquired a work by French painter Marie-Philippe Coupin de la Couperie. The painting is called Raphael Adjusts Fornarina’s Hair Before Painting her Portrait and was put on display at the Saloon in 1824. It is a fine example of what is known as the Troubadour style, which became popular in the years following the French Revolution.

  • A five-year long acquisition project of Danish art at Nationalmuseum has been concluded

    When the Danish Golden Age exhibition at Nationalmuseum comes to an end on 21 July a chapter in the history of the museum will also come to an end. It will mark the end of an acquisition project of paintings from the Danish Golden Age , in all 90 paintings and the same number of drawings have been acquired and incorporated into the museum's collection, making it the largest outside of Denmark.

  • Exhibitions at Nationalmuseum this autumn

    1989 – culture and politics
    5 September 2019 – 12 January 2020
    This autumn will mark the thirty year anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall. It became the political symbol of a political world order that has endured since the end of the second world war. The exhibition examines what took place in the visual culture in the broadest sense in this radical historical period. It will be a kal

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