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MSU - Muzej Suvremene Umjetnosti Zagreb

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The Contemporary Art Museum is today's name of the City of Zagreb Galleries, consisting of the Contemporary Art Gallery, Centre for Photography, The Benko Horvat Collection, Library, and Documentation Dept. It also used to include The Mestrovic Atelier (Today's Mestrovic Foundation), The Primitive Art Gallery (The Croatian Naive Art Museum), and The "Jozo Kljakovic" Collectionotoday under the management of the Visual Arts Education centre), before they became separate institutions. The Museum was established on 21 December, 1954, when, under the decision of the then City of Zagreb National Board, The Municipal Gallery of Contemporary Art was established, with the purpose of following, documenting, and promoting contemporary art events, styles, and phenomena. The Gallery immediately began to establish its own holdings and act as a museum establishment, following modern museological principles and needs of the period.

The Museum has two addresses in the Zagreb's Upper Town: Katarinin trg 2, at count Kulmer's Baroque palace, where the exhibition space is located, and Habdeliceva 2, where the library, documentation archives, and management are located. The largest part of the Museum's Collection consists of the works by both Croatian and foreign authors created after 1950, while there is also a smaller part dating back to the first half of the 20th c. Namely, their presence is essential for grasping the concept of both modern and contemporary art. The Museum also keeps various donations, such as the comprehensive and heterogeneous art collection of Benko Horvat; a complex surrealist opus of the painter Josip Seissel (donated by Ms. Silvana Seissel), and a special collection of the architect Vjenceslav Richter that is still kept at his home.

Numerous works from the International Art Collection pertain to the international movement New Tendencies . As an international manifestation, the movement was taking place at the Contemporary Art Gallery in the 1961-1973 period, thus confirming Zagreb as one among the most interesting European art centres of the 60's. The five manifestations managed to gather numerous outstanding artists (Vasarely, Soto, Le Parc, Piene, Alviani, Biasi), including also art critics and theoreticians, such as Abraham Moles and Umberto Eco.

Owing to the expertise of its curators and associates, the Gallery confirmed its status as a contemporary type museum. Merely ten years after its establishment, it was invited to include a part of its holdings into the XXXII Venetian Biennale (1964), in the scope of the exhibition entitled "Arte d'oggi nei musei", together with seventeen of the world's most prominent museums. In 1966, it was in the company of the fifteen most prominent galleries of Europe, America, and Japan at "Le 2emme Salon international des Galeries pilotes" in Lausanne.

Today's importance of the Museum of the Contemporary Art is confirmed by the activities undertaken for the construction of a special Museum building. After several studies in 1996, the site of the future Museum was set in Novi Zagreb, at the crossroads of Avenija Veceslava Holjevca and Avenija Dubrovnik. On 10 March, 1999-111., national solliciting for tenders has been announced for the architectural and town planning design of the future Museum building.

The Museum has no collection on permanent display due to the modest conditions under which it is presently accommodated. Its museum/gallery and educational activities are performed by organizing thematic and monographic exhibitions of both local and foreign artists, exhibitions of the works from its holdings, lectures, workshops, and children's workshops.

The Museum of Contemporary Art's collections today include around 9,000 works of both modern and contemporary art by local and foreign authors. After the new Museum building is constructed, they shall finally become available to the general public.



Künstler der Galerie bzw der Sammlung

Marina Abramovic  Marina Abramovic freereport  
Marc Adrian    
Jean Arp    
John Baldessari  John Baldessari freereport  
Joseph Beuys  Joseph Beuys freereport  Joseph Beuys quickreport
Max Bill  Max Bill freereport  
Hartmut Böhm    
Christian Boltanski  Christian Boltanski freereport  Christian Boltanski quickreport
Dadamaino    
Sonia Delaunay    
Johannes Deutsch    
Braco Dimitrijevic    
Piero Dorazio    
Dušan Džamonja    
Jan Fabre  Jan Fabre freereport  
Hans Haacke  Hans Haacke freereport  
Krsto Hegedušic    
Nan Hoover    
Sanja Ivekovic    
On Kawara  On Kawara freereport  
Julije Knifer    
Vlado Kristl    
Julio Le Parc    
Fernand Léger    
Adolf Luther    
Mangelos    
Vlado Martek    
Annette Messager  Annette Messager freereport  
Henry Moore    
François Morellet  François Morellet freereport  
Maurizio Nannucci    
Pablo Picasso  Pablo Picasso freereport  
Ivan Picelj    
Otto Piene  Otto Piene freereport  
Dubravka Rakocic    
Man Ray  Man Ray freereport  
Vjenceslav Richter    
Ulrike Rosenbach    
Ed Ruscha  Ed Ruscha freereport  
Sarkís    
Julião Sarmento  Julião Sarmento freereport  
Hubert Schmalix    
Andres Serrano    
Jesús Rafael Soto  Jesús Rafael Soto freereport  
Aleksandar Srnec    
Mladen Stilinovic  Mladen Stilinovic freereport  
Tristan Tzara    
Victor Vasarely  Victor Vasarely freereport  



 

Kontaktinfos

MSU - Muzej Suvremene Umjetnosti Zagreb
Katarinin trg 2
10000 Zagreb (Korea)

Tel: +385 1 4851808
msu@msu.tel.hr
www.mdc.hr/msu/