English summary

The National Museum in Warsaw

Al. Jerozolimskie 3, Warsaw 00-495
E-mail:
Tel. (48 22) 621 10 31
Fax (48 22) 622 85 59

 

Opening hours:

Permanent Galleries and Temporary Exhibitions:

Monday – closed

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.

Saturday, Sunday 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

 

 

In 1916 the Museum of Fine Arts in Warsaw, set up on the strength of the May 20th 1862 Law on Public Education in the Kingdom of Poland, was renamed National Museum in Warsaw. At the time the museum was based in 15 Podwale Street. In 1926 the construction of the museum's current seat in Aleje Jerozolimskie began. In 1932 an exhibition of decorative art was opened in the two earliest erected wings of the new building, the whole of which was officially inaugurated on 18 June 1938. Credit for the rank of the National Museum, preserved in spite of the dramatic war years and the vicissitudes of the recent history, goes to the first two directors, Bronisław Gembarzewski (in office till 1935) and Stanisław Lorentz (in office in 1935-1981). At present, the collection of the National Museum in Warsaw includes 780 000 items displayed in permanent galleries (the gallery of Ancient Art, the Professor Kazimierz Michałowski Faras Gallery, the Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński, Primate of Poland, Gallery of Mediaeval Art, the Gallery of Foreign Painting, the Gallery of Polish Painting, the Gallery of 20th century Polish Art, the Gallery of Polish Decorative Art and Gallery of European Decorative Art) and many temporal exhibitions; numerous sets of items are stored in special collections accessible to the public on request in special reading-and-seeing rooms (print and drawing rooms, Photographic and Iconographic Collection, Coin and Medal Room) and repositories.


The museum boasts the largest Polish scholarly library of art catalogues, art history books, books on cultures of almost all over the world, and a fine collection of old maps and prints.


1995 marked the beginning of the reorganization of the National Museum. The traditional prewar names of museum units were reintroduced and the Sculpture Collection was organized anew.


The Faras Gallery has given rise to the new Collection of East Christian Art, also embracing Byzantine art.


The opening of new permanent galleries, the Gallery of Italian Painting and a reorganized Gallery of Ancient Art, was realized in 2000.


A comprehensive plan for the enlargement of the museum and a new arrangement of its galleries is being prepared, implying that the National Museum in Warsaw has entered a difficult transition period. Let us hope that the result will be a more interesting and a more modern institution cultivating a tradition developed for a century and a half.

 

Temporary exhibitions

Jan Bułhak (1876 – 1950). Art Photographer

December 15th 2006 –  February 11th 2007

 

The magic of gold – art and symbol. From antiquity to 20th century

March 9th –  May 6th 2007

 

Andrzej Wróblewski 1927-1957, 50th anniversary of the artist death

February 27th – May 6th 2007

 

20th century art gallery. Uncovering tne collection 1945-1955

April 13th 2007 - December 30th 2008

 

Like a meteor... Stanislaw Wyspianski 1869-1907

August 10th  - September 30th 2007

 

Southern Netherlands in the 17th century - Flemish painting of the Golden Age

November 6th - December 30th  2007

 

Exploring The Interwar Period In Polish Art
January 18th – March 30th 2008

 

Ukraine to the world. Treasures of Ukraine from the Platar collection
April 15th – June 29th 2008

 

Nero's Golden House. Exhibition organised to commemorate the 200th death anniversary of Franciszek Smuglewicz

May 6th - July 13th 2008

 

Points of Reference

July 24th - September 30th 2008

 

The Sucha Collection

Agust 21st - September 21st 2008

 

Orientalism in Polish  Art
October 17th 2008 – January 4th 2009

 

Halina Nałęcz In Memoriam

December 2nd 2008 – January 31st 2009


Le siècle français. 18th century French painting and drawing from the Polish collections

February 28th – April  26th 2009