Only in Vienna
A must-see during your Vienna visit. One of the world’s leading museums, its rich holdings comprise objects from five millennia, from Ancient Egypt to the late eighteenth century. The Picture Gallery is home to works by great masters from Dürer to Raphael, Titan and Tintoretto, Rubens and Velázquez, to Rembrandt and Vermeer.
Of particular interest is the world’s largest collection of works by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, which includes such famous paintings as The Tower of Babel, Peasant Wedding, and Hunters in the Snow. The Kunstkammer collection is considered one of the most important of its kind in the world and has only recently been reopened for public viewing in 2013. The 2,200-piece collection is mainly based on the Habsburgs long and passionate tradition of collecting the fabulous and exotic, the rare and the curious. This truly impressive collection which contains such masterpieces as Cellini’s Saliera – a golden crafted salt cellar center piece, and imperial works of art by the great Rubens, Rembrandt, Raphael, Velazquez, Titian and Durer is sure to capture your imagination and stay with you forever.
The Building: Planning of the Ringstrasse began in 1857 and included the project to bring together and show the imperial collections in a grand new building featuring state-of-the-art technical and display facilities; it took, however, another ten years until the competition to design the new museums was actually held. The architects who participated in 1867 were Hansen, Löhr, Ferstel and Hasenauer, all of whom worked in Vienna. When jury and patron failed for months to agree on a winner, Gottfried Semper, the internationally renowned architect known for his museum designs, was called in as an advisor in 1868. The Emperor then decided to commission Semper to alter and complete the plans initially presented by Hasenauer. But he also enlarged them – his designs were informed by urban planning in ancient Rome – to create what was known as the “imperial forum”: He envisaged an additional – also symmetrical - pair of buildings aligned with the two museums, each of which featured a semi-circular façade. These two buildings were to flank the Hofburg’s Leopoltinische Trakt (the wing of the old palace erected under Emperor Leopold) for which Semper planned a modern façade and that would house the throne room. However, only the two museums and the part of the “Neue Burg” (new palace) facing the Burggarten (palace garden) were realised. Work on the museums commenced in 1871 and twenty years later, in 1891, they were formally opened to the public. Semper had moderated Hasenauer’s original design for the façades and they now feature a complex art-historical programme of sculptures and reliefs. The building’s internal structure combines two architectural traditions: entrance hall, staircase and cupola hall form a dramatic unit that celebrates the imperial patron and his predecessors. An additional elegant feature is the circular opening in the ceiling of the entrance hall that offers visitors their first glimpse of the cupola hall. Ascending the stairs, visitors pass Antonio Canova’s “Theseus Slaying the Centaur” on their way to the cupola hall, the apex of imperial display. Along this central axis a wealth of neo-baroque decorations creates one of the most solemn and splendid interiors of late-nineteenth-century Vienna, probably unrivalled in any other European museum.
MEETING POINT INSTRUCTIONS:
To reach the museum from the Westbahnhof
Take subway train U3 to the Volkstheater station.
To reach the museum from the Hauptbahnhof
Take streetcar D to the Burgring/Kunsthistorisches Museum stop.
Public transportation
U2, U3, D, 1, 2, 2A, 57A
AUDIOGUIDE: German, English, Italian, French, Spanish, Russian, Ukrainian and Mandarin. This is not included and paid locally.
GENERAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR VISITORS TO THE KHM-MUSEUMSVERBAND: https://www.khm.at/fileadmin/user_upload/KHM__Hausordnung_07_2022-khm.pdf
Inclusions:
- Tickets
Exclusions:
- Audioguide
Important Info:
N/A
Redeem Info:
PRINTED - Printed Voucher. Print and bring the voucher to enjoy the activity.
Starting point: LANDMARK - Kunsthistorisches Museum, Wien, - (Longitude: 16.361562, Latitude: 48.203904)
Ending point: Same - Same as Starting Point
Inclusions:
- Tickets
Exclusions:
- Audioguide
Important Info:
N/A