Silesian Museum (Katowice)

Silesian Museum in Katowice (Polish: Muzeum Śląskie w Katowicach) is a museum in the City of Katowice, Poland.

Non-existent, (destroyed by Germans - Wehrmacht, as a sign of new rule) building of the Silesian Museum, near the current Henryka Dąbrowskiego Street 23 in Katowice
Silesian Museum in Katowice
Established1929, 1984 reinstated
Location1 Tadeusza Dobrowolskiego Street
Katowice, Poland
TypeVoivodeship museum
DirectorMarcin Gwoździewicz
Websitewww.muzeumslaskie.pl
Former Grand Hotel, 1984-2015 seat of the museum

History

The museum was founded in 1929 by the Silesian Sejm, while the region was recovering from the Silesian Uprisings. In the XX century interbellum, the Silesian Museum in Katowice was one of the biggest museums in Poland. The Germans-Nazis however brought the collection to Bytom and tore the building down in 1940. In 1984 the museum was reinstated in the former Grand Hotel. In 2015 a new seat was opened on the site of the former Katowice coal mine (See article in German or article in Polish) founded by Carl Lazarus Henckel von Donnersmarck including old extant buildings, but the primary exhibition space is underground in what was the mine.[1]

Collection

Warszawa mine shaft tower, now part of the Silesian Museum in Katowice

Permanent exhibitions[2] cover:

  • Upper Silesia over the course of history, presented in Polish, English and also German, and notably addressing sensitive issues such as the area's German cultural heritage and relationship with Germany – topics taboo under the Communist regime.[3]
  • Polish Art 1800–1945
  • Gallery of non-Professional Art
  • Polish Art after 1945
  • On the trail of Tomek Wilmowski
  • Sacred Art
  • Silesian industry
  • Laboratory of theatrical space
  • Silesian industry in arms production of the 19th–20th c.

Artists on display

Among the works of Polish art are remarkable examples portraits by Stanisław Wyspiański, paintings by Olga Boznańska, Henryk Rodakowski, Jan Matejko, Józef Chełmoński, Aleksander Gierymski, Jacek Malczewski, Leon Wyczółkowski, Józef Pankiewicz, Władysław Podkowiński, and Jan Stanisławski. Other artists on display from the original collection, returned from Bytom, are:

More contemporary artists on display are: Edward Dwurnik, Adam Marczyński, Andrzej Wróblewski, Tadeusz Kantor, Jerzy Nowosielski, Władysław Hasior, Zdzisław Beksiński, Lech Majewski, Zbigniew Libera, Natalia LL.

References

Works and publications

  • "O muzeum. Historia". www.muzeumslaskie.pl. Retrieved 2011-06-05.
  • Wojciech Janota: Katowice między wojnami. Miasto i jego sprawy 1922–1939. Łódź: Księży Młyn, 2010, s. 110, 111. ISBN 978-83-7729-021-7.


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