Category Archives: Theme

Baroque, Neoclassicism and Romanticism (17th-19th centuries), Maricel Museum

Originally posted 2020-01-13 07:58:24. The museum included works from the collection of Dr. Jesús Pérez-Rosales that never had been exhibited in public, acquisitions by the Sitges Heritage Association since 2012 (Ramon Casas, Miquel Utrillo, Arcadi Mas i Fondevila, Artur Carbonell i Augustí Ferrer Pino) ​​and donations from artist’s relatives (Pere…

From the Romanesque to the Renaissance (10th-16th centuries), Maricel Museum

Originally posted 2020-01-13 05:45:24. With the Maiestas Domini (Christ in Majesty) from Cap d’Aran, on the ground floor, we begin our chronological itinerary through the Museum’s collection. This fresco painting, transferred to canvas, reveals the characteristic traits of the Romanesque: pure colours and a schematic rendering of form and space.…

From Viennese Style to International Style, Vienna 1900, Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna

Originally posted 2020-01-10 18:22:10. This third and final section differs from the two previous ones in that the objects shown are both later-dated and far more heterogeneous. This simultaneously serves to address a phenomenon that, unlike today, was new in interwar Austria: heterogeneity of taste can arise once there exists…

Glass Collection of Renaissance Baroque Rococo, Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna

Originally posted 2020-01-10 16:16:23. The Museum of Applied Arts’s collection of lace, and its holdings of glassware—especially Venetian glass—are considered among the finest and most varied in the world. Even in the Baroque period, Venetian glasswork was particularly treasured, and both men and women spent vast sums on the sumptuous…

Textile Collection: Flying Carpets, Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna

Originally posted 2020-01-10 04:12:42. Carpets illustrate the high degree of cultural networking between Europe and Asia. Produced in the Near and Middle East, carpets were sought-after commodities. Mobile and easy to transport, they were traded internationally as luxury goods. The migration of techniques, materials and motifs illustrates the interactions not…