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Vienna Museum

The Vienna Museum (German: Wien Museum or Museen der Stadt Wien) is a group of museums in Vienna consisting of the museums of the history of the city. In addition to the main building in Karlsplatz and the Hermesvilla, the group includes numerous specialised museums, musicians' residences and archaeological excavations.

Vienna Museum
Vienna Museum main building on Karlsplatz
Interactive fullscreen map
LocationVienna, Austria
Coordinates48°11′56.0″N 16°22′23.2″E / 48.198889°N 16.373111°E / 48.198889; 16.373111

The permanent exhibit of art and the historical collection on the history of Vienna include exhibits dating from the Neolithic to the mid-20th century. The emphasis is on the 19th century, for example works by Gustav Klimt. In addition, the Vienna Museum hosts a variety of special exhibitions.

History edit

Originally known as the Historical Museum of the City of Vienna (Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien), its existence dates back to 1887, and until 1959 was located in the Vienna Town Hall (Rathaus). The first plans for a city museum on Karlsplatz date back to the beginning of the 20th century; one of proposed plans were drawn by the renowned Jugendstil architect Otto Wagner. However, not least because of two world wars, the building of the museum was postponed for several decades.

In 1953, the City Council of Vienna passed a resolution to honour Austrian president and former mayor Theodor Körner, on the occasion of his 80th birthday by making the museum building a reality. A design contest was organised, in which 13 architects were specifically invited to take part (including Clemens Holzmeister, Erich Boltenstern and Karl Schwanzer) but which was open to any other entrants. Designs were evaluated by a jury which was chaired by the architect Franz Schuster and whose other members were the architects Max Fellerer and Roland Rainer, the Vienna Director of Building, the Director of City Collections, Franz Glück, the Head of the City Department of Regulations and the Head of the Department of Architecture.

80 contestants took part and submitted a total of 96 designs. The jury awarded Oswald Haerdtl fourth place, but he was subsequently "off-handedly" contracted to design the building, which was executed in an unassuming contemporary modern style. Haertl was also responsible for the interior design, down to the furnishing of the director's office. The museum opened on 23 April 1959 as the first newly built museum of the Second Republic, and remained the only such for decades.[1][2]

The Historical Museum repeatedly distinguished itself with its exhibitions. In 1985, under director Robert Waissenberger, it presented the Jugendstil exhibition Traum und Wirklichkeit (Dream and Reality) at the Vienna Künstlerhaus on the opposite side of the square; with more than 600,000 visitors, one of the most successful exhibitions ever held in Vienna.

In 2000, the courtyard was roofed over. In 2003, under the direction of Wolfgang Kos, the museums of the City of Vienna were united under the umbrella name of Vienna Museum and the Historical Museum was renamed Vienna Museum. In early 2006, the foyer was renovated and in addition, new exhibition space was created in what had been a storage area.

 
One of the exhibition rooms

The main building of the museum presents a mix of historical and art exhibits with the intent of offering the visitor a cross section of the development of the city, from its beginnings in the Neolithic through the Roman camp of Vindobona up to the 20th century. In addition to the permanent exhibits, there are frequent special exhibitions.

A memorandum of understanding and cooperation was signed in January 2000 with the Nagoya City Museum, establishing it as a partner museum.[3]

Highlights of 50 years, 1958–2008 edit

In autumn 2008, to celebrate its 50 years in the Karlsplatz building, the Vienna Museum published a list of highlights of its history,[4] including the following:

  • 23 April 1959: Formal opening of the Historical Museum building and of the first special exhibition, on Hieronymus Löschenkohl, by President Adolf Schärf
  • 1960: Exhibition on the Vienna Municipal Armoury
  • 1961: Opening of the permanent exhibition on the Art and History of Vienna
  • 1963: Exhibition on Otto Wagner: The Architects' Oeuvre
  • 1964: Opening of Prater Museum; exhibition on Vienna circa 1900
  • 1968: Exhibition on Joseph Olbrich
  • 1969: Exhibition on Vienna 1800–1850: Empire and Biedermeier
  • 1970: Opening of Beethoven memorial in Heiligenstadt
  • 1973: Exhibition on 1850–1900: World of the Ringstraße
  • 1974–1986: Free entrance to the museum and its annexes
  • 1977: Exhibition on Vindobona: The Romans in the Vienna area
  • 1979: Renovated Hermesvilla becomes a unit of the Museums of the City of Vienna; one of the demolition-threatened Stadtbahn pavilions by Otto Wagner in Karlsplatz is transferred to the museum
  • 1980: Exhibition on The Vienna Coffeehouse: From the beginnings to between the wars
  • 1981: 106,000 people visit the Egon Schiele exhibition with works from the Serge Sabarsky collection
  • 1982: Neidhart Frescoes become a new museum annexe
  • 1983: First large-scale exhibition in the Künstlerhaus on The Turks at the gates of Vienna, curated by Hans Hollein
  • 1985: Large-scale exhibition on Dream and Reality: Vienna 1870–1930, curated by Hans Hollein; a record-breaking 622,000 visitors
  • 1986: Exhibition on Elisabeth of Austria: Loneliness, power and freedom, at Hermesvilla
  • 1987: Exhibition on Biedermeier and Vormärz in the Künstlerhaus, curated by Boris Podrecca
  • 1989: Exhibition on Arnulf Rainer which travels on to New York City and Chicago
  • 1993: Exhibition on Red Vienna
  • 1995: Exhibition on Hans Hollein
  • 1997: Exhibition on Franz Schubert, curated by Hermann Czech
  • 1999: Exhibitions on Rebuilt Vienna 1800–2000: Projects for the metropolis; Johann Strauß: Thunder and lightning
  • 2000: Atrium extension and roofing over by Dimitris Manikas; exhibition on Hans Makart: Painter prince, at Hermesvilla. Cooperation established with Nagoya City Museum.
  • 2002: Separation of the Historical Museum of the City of Vienna from city government
  • 2003: Renamed Vienna Museum
  • 2004: Exhibition on Gastarbajteri: 40 years of worker migration; large-scale exhibition on Old Vienna: the city that never was (Künstlerhaus)
  • 2006: Renovation by BMW Architekten: new entrance area, additional exhibition space
  • 2007: Exhibitions on In the Tavern; At the Bottom: The discovery of misery
  • 2008: Opening of the Museum of the Romans in Hoher Markt
  • 2009: Reopening of renovated Haydn House
  • 2009-2010: Large-scale exhibition at the Künstlerhaus: Battle for the City: Politics, art and everyday life circa 1930
  • 2018: Exhibition on Otto Wagner

Collection highlights edit

Hermesvilla edit

 
Hermesvilla

Since 1971, exhibitions have been presented in the Hermesvilla, a former imperial residence in the Lainzer Tiergarten in the west of Vienna which Emperor Franz Joseph had built for his wife Empress Elisabeth in 1882–86. Under former mayor Bruno Marek, the building was restored by the Association of Friends of the Hermesvilla and subsequently taken over by the city. The permanent exhibition is dedicated to the history of the building and the imperial couple, who spent a few days there each year until Elisabeth's death. In addition, special exhibitions are mounted on a wide variety of themes in cultural history.

Special museums edit

Otto Wagner Pavilion on Karlsplatz edit

 

Since 2005, a permanent exhibition on the life and work of Otto Wagner has been on show in this former Vienna Stadtbahn building.

The building was constructed in 1898 as one of a pair of Jugendstil pavilions on either side of the square as part of the construction of the Stadtbahn in the 1890s; Otto Wagner was the contract designer of the system. During the planning in the 1960s for the new Vienna U-Bahn nodal station at Karlsplatz, the two pavilions were saved from demolition, dismantled, restored, and put back in place in 1977 after completion of the construction work in the square. They no longer serve any transport purpose.

Otto Wagner Hofpavillon at Hietzing edit

 

The Pavillon des k.u.k. Allerhöchsten Hofes (Pavilion of the royal and imperial court) in Hietzing near Schönbrunn Palace was built in 1899 to Otto Wagner's design as a special station for the use of the Emperor and members of his court when using the Stadtbahn. It was not included in the original plans for the Stadtbahn, but Wagner began construction on his own initiative and was finally able to win over the Minister for Railways, Heinrich von Wittek. In contrast to the other Stadtbahn stations, this pavilion with its cupola has baroque elements, which could be interpreted as a sign of respect for the Emperor on the architect's part. It was built at the inbound end of the platform at the Hietzing station, which opened in 1898; originally there were steps linking it to the public platforms.

The Emperor is only known to have used the station on two occasions: in 1899 when he opened the lower Vienna Valley line on the Stadtbahn (between Meidling Hauptstraße and Hauptzollamt) and in April 1902. Today the imperial waiting room and study and other rooms in the building are on permanent display.

Prater Museum edit

The Prater Museum is located in the Prater park, in the planetarium building near the Ferris wheel. It presents the history of Vienna's largest amusement park, the Wurstelprater, with exhibits such as an old mechanical fortune-teller and coverage of dark rides and sideshows. The museum was founded in 1933 by the teacher and local historian Hans Pemmer in his home and donated in 1964 to the City of Vienna, which built the present museum.[5]

Clock Museum edit

 
Entrance to Clock Museum in Palais Obizzi

The Vienna Clock Museum in the Palais Obizzi in the Innere Stadt, founded in 1917, is one of the most important of its kind on Europe. On the ground floor are displayed the collections of the museum's first and long-time director, Rudolf Kaftan, and of the poet Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach. During the Second World War, the "House of Ten Thousand Clocks", as it is also known, was closed and attempts were made to disperse the valuable clocks for safety to various castles in Lower Austria, with only partial success. After the war, work began on rebuilding the collection; thanks to funds from the City of Vienna and private donations, it has been possible to add a few additional rarities to the collection.[6]

Fashion collection library edit

The Vienna Museum has a fashion collection in Meidling, adjacent to the Vienna School of Fashion at Schloss Hetzendorf. This is not open to the public, but the public may use the attached library, consisting of over 12,000 volumes and numerous periodicals, photographs and approximately 3,000 engravings on the subject of fashion.

Musicians' residences edit

The Vienna Museum includes numerous residences in which notable composers lived, were born and died, which are largely in original condition and intended to afford the visitor insight into the artists' everyday lives. Exhibits include music manuscripts, but also objects they used.

Mozart residence edit

The rooms in the Mozarthaus Vienna in Domgasse, near St. Stephen's Cathedral, are the only one of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart's residences in Vienna to have been preserved (and the original furnishings have not been preserved). Mozart lived here from 1784 to 1787, during which time he composed, among other works, his opera The Marriage of Figaro, for which reason the house is also known today as the Figaro House. The flat has been open to visitors for decades; it was reopened in early 2006 after renovation. The house has several floors of exhibition space including objects such as the desk at which Mozart supposedly composed The Magic Flute.

Beethoven residence in Heiligenstadt edit

 
Beethoven residence in Heiligenstadt

Ludwig van Beethoven spent the summer of 1802 in a house in Heiligenstadt, which at the time was a suburb of Vienna. There was a spa, where Beethoven attempted to reduce or cure his increasing deafness. During this stay, he worked on compositions including his Second Symphony, but also — in an episode of depression and despair about the state of his hearing — wrote his Heiligenstadt Testament. According to oral tradition, the house was Herrengasse 6, now Probusgasse 6; this is however disputed, since at the time there were no registration records for the suburbs of Vienna and Beethoven's own letters do not mention the address.

Eroica House edit

The Eroica House is a memorial to Beethoven's stay in Oberdöbling in the summer of 1803, during which he composed a large part of his Eroica Symphony. However, Beethoven never stayed in the house. Josef Böck-Gnadenau misidentified the building, because he was unaware that the houses were re-numbered in 1804, rather than 1802. In 1872, Alexander Wheelock Thayer had identified the correct house: Hofzeile 15, which no longer exists.

Pasqualati House edit

In 1804–08 and 1810–14, Beethoven lived at the house of his patron Johann Baptist Freiherr von Pasqualati on the Mölker Bastei (Mölk Bastion, a remnant of the old city walls) in the Innere Stadt. Here he composed, among other works, the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies, Für Elise, the Archduke Trio and his only opera, Fidelio. Since Beethoven's actual flat in the north section of the fourth floor has a tenant, the next-door flat is on show as the Beethoven exhibit.

Haydn House edit

 
Haydn House, around 1840

In 1793, Joseph Haydn acquired the house which is now Haydngasse 19 in Mariahilf, and lived there until his death in 1809. The original address was Kleine Steingasse 71 (changed in 1795 to 73), and it was located in the hamlet of Obere Windmühle, which was part of the outlying town of Windmühle but was almost entirely surrounded by the larger town of Gumpendorf and was part of its parish. Here Haydn composed, among other works, the oratorios The Creation and The Seasons. In 1862, the street was renamed for its most famous residents, and the house has been a memorial since 1899 and a museum since 1904. In one of the rooms, Johannes Brahms' composing desk is on display. In 2009, the 200th anniversary year of Haydn's death, the permanent exhibition was recast and enlarged; it emphasizes the composer's last years.

Birthplace of Franz Schubert edit

 
Schubert birthplace in Alsergrund

Franz Schubert spent the first four and a half years of his life in this house in Nußdorfer Straße in Himmelpfortgrund in what is now Alsergrund, the 9th district of Vienna. One important exhibit is Schubert's 'trademark' glasses. The house also has on display approximately 50 paintings by Adalbert Stifter, who was better known as an author.

Schubert's death place edit

Schubert spent only the last two and a half months of his life in his brother Ferdinand's flat in Kettenbrückengasse in Wieden, where he died in 1828. Exhibits include his last drafts of compositions and a copy of the last letter he wrote by hand, to Franz von Schober.

Johann Strauss residence edit

The flat in Praterstraße in Leopoldstadt was the residence of Johann Strauss the Younger in the 1860s. Here he composed among other works the Blue Danube waltz, whose first notes traditionally inaugurate the New Year for the Viennese.

Archaeological excavations edit

The Vienna Museum includes a number of archaeological sites which document various periods in the history of the city. All are located in the Innere Stadt.

Michaelerplatz excavations edit

 
Michaelerplatz excavations

Archaeological excavations in the Michaelerplatz between 1989 and 1991 uncovered among other things the settlement of Canabæ associated with the Roman camp at Vindobona. This will have consisted primarily of the residences of soldiers' wives and children. The excavation site was made permanently accessible to the public in 1991; the design of the presentation is by architect Hans Hollein.

Vergilius Chapel edit

The Vergilius Chapel near St. Stephen's Cathedral was built around 1250, but in the 14th century became a crypt for a wealthy family. In 1732 the cathedral graveyard was abandoned and in 1781 the adjacent Chapel of St. Mary Magdalene burnt down, following which the Vergilius Chapel was filled in and eventually forgotten. It now lies approximately 12 metres under the Stephansplatz and was rediscovered in 1973 during the building of the U-Bahn; it is now integrated into the Stephansplatz station and can be reached from there.

Museum of the Romans edit

 
Remains of a hypocaust from a Roman house at Museum of the Romans

In the Hoher Markt north of Stephansplatz, excavated ruins of houses which served as officers' quarters in Vindobona are on display, together with exhibits of ceramic ware, gravestones and other objects which illuminate life 2,000 years ago in the Roman camp and attached town. This museum annexe, previously known as the "Roman Ruins", was expanded and reopened in May 2008 as the Museum of the Romans.[7]

Roman ruins under fire headquarters edit

In the cellar of the fire headquarters in Am Hof are the remains of a main drainage canal which once carried effluent from the southern section of the Roman camp to the brook which is now the street Tiefer Graben. Preserved in original condition, they were discovered in the 1950s during excavations for the foundations when the fire headquarters, destroyed by World War II bombing, were being rebuilt. At a depth of almost 3 metres, ruins of a wall of the Roman camp, a wall tower, part of a street which ran beside the wall and an approximately 5 metre stretch of the canal below the wall were uncovered.[8]

Neidhart frescoes edit

The Neidhart frescoes are in a 14th-century building in Tuchlauben and are the oldest surviving secular wall paintings in Vienna. The cycle of paintings were executed in 1398 on the walls of a then banqueting room on a commission from the wealthy merchant Michel Menschein. For the most part they show scenes from the life of the minnesinger Neidhart von Reuental. They were discovered in 1979 under a layer of plaster when the building was being renovated, and have been on view to the public since 1982.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ Juli 1953: Der Wettbewerb für den Museumsneubau, Wien im Rückblick (in German)
  2. ^ November 1953: Museum der Stadt Wien: Die erste Besichtigung der Wettbewerbsentwürfe, Wien im Rückblick (in German)
  3. ^ Memorandum of understanding and cooperation between the Nagoya City Museum and the Historical Museum of Vienna, at Wikimedia Commons (in German).
  4. ^ 1959–2009: 50 Jahre Geschichte mit Zukunft. Exhibition catalogue. Wien Museum Karlsplatz (in German)
  5. ^ Prof. Hans Pemmer, der unermüdliche Volksbildner 2014-04-19 at the Wayback Machine, Bezirksmuseum Landstraße, Die Wiener Bezirksmuseen, Museen.net (in German)
  6. ^ Juni 1947: Das Haus der zehntausend Uhren, Wien im Rückblick (in German)
  7. ^ "Die Römer kommen nach Wien", ORF 10 May 2008 (in German)
  8. ^ Juli 1958: Ein römischer Kanal unter der Feuerwehrzentrale, Wien im Rückblick (in German)
  9. ^ Neidhart Fresken, Burgenkunde.at (in German)

External links edit

  • Vienna Museum homepage (in German)
  • Vienna Museum English homepage
  • Interactive 360° x 180° panorama of Vienna Museum Karlsplatz: requires Flash
  • Vienna Museum within Google Arts & Culture
  •   Media related to Wien Museum at Wikimedia Commons

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The Vienna Museum German Wien Museum or Museen der Stadt Wien is a group of museums in Vienna consisting of the museums of the history of the city In addition to the main building in Karlsplatz and the Hermesvilla the group includes numerous specialised museums musicians residences and archaeological excavations Vienna MuseumVienna Museum main building on KarlsplatzInteractive fullscreen mapLocationVienna AustriaCoordinates48 11 56 0 N 16 22 23 2 E 48 198889 N 16 373111 E 48 198889 16 373111The permanent exhibit of art and the historical collection on the history of Vienna include exhibits dating from the Neolithic to the mid 20th century The emphasis is on the 19th century for example works by Gustav Klimt In addition the Vienna Museum hosts a variety of special exhibitions Contents 1 History 1 1 Highlights of 50 years 1958 2008 2 Collection highlights 3 Hermesvilla 4 Special museums 4 1 Otto Wagner Pavilion on Karlsplatz 4 2 Otto Wagner Hofpavillon at Hietzing 4 3 Prater Museum 4 4 Clock Museum 4 5 Fashion collection library 5 Musicians residences 5 1 Mozart residence 5 2 Beethoven residence in Heiligenstadt 5 3 Eroica House 5 4 Pasqualati House 5 5 Haydn House 5 6 Birthplace of Franz Schubert 5 7 Schubert s death place 5 8 Johann Strauss residence 6 Archaeological excavations 6 1 Michaelerplatz excavations 6 2 Vergilius Chapel 6 3 Museum of the Romans 6 4 Roman ruins under fire headquarters 6 5 Neidhart frescoes 7 References 8 External linksHistory editOriginally known as the Historical Museum of the City of Vienna Historisches Museum der Stadt Wien its existence dates back to 1887 and until 1959 was located in the Vienna Town Hall Rathaus The first plans for a city museum on Karlsplatz date back to the beginning of the 20th century one of proposed plans were drawn by the renowned Jugendstil architect Otto Wagner However not least because of two world wars the building of the museum was postponed for several decades In 1953 the City Council of Vienna passed a resolution to honour Austrian president and former mayor Theodor Korner on the occasion of his 80th birthday by making the museum building a reality A design contest was organised in which 13 architects were specifically invited to take part including Clemens Holzmeister Erich Boltenstern and Karl Schwanzer but which was open to any other entrants Designs were evaluated by a jury which was chaired by the architect Franz Schuster and whose other members were the architects Max Fellerer and Roland Rainer the Vienna Director of Building the Director of City Collections Franz Gluck the Head of the City Department of Regulations and the Head of the Department of Architecture 80 contestants took part and submitted a total of 96 designs The jury awarded Oswald Haerdtl fourth place but he was subsequently off handedly contracted to design the building which was executed in an unassuming contemporary modern style Haertl was also responsible for the interior design down to the furnishing of the director s office The museum opened on 23 April 1959 as the first newly built museum of the Second Republic and remained the only such for decades 1 2 The Historical Museum repeatedly distinguished itself with its exhibitions In 1985 under director Robert Waissenberger it presented the Jugendstil exhibition Traum und Wirklichkeit Dream and Reality at the Vienna Kunstlerhaus on the opposite side of the square with more than 600 000 visitors one of the most successful exhibitions ever held in Vienna In 2000 the courtyard was roofed over In 2003 under the direction of Wolfgang Kos the museums of the City of Vienna were united under the umbrella name of Vienna Museum and the Historical Museum was renamed Vienna Museum In early 2006 the foyer was renovated and in addition new exhibition space was created in what had been a storage area nbsp One of the exhibition roomsThe main building of the museum presents a mix of historical and art exhibits with the intent of offering the visitor a cross section of the development of the city from its beginnings in the Neolithic through the Roman camp of Vindobona up to the 20th century In addition to the permanent exhibits there are frequent special exhibitions A memorandum of understanding and cooperation was signed in January 2000 with the Nagoya City Museum establishing it as a partner museum 3 Highlights of 50 years 1958 2008 edit In autumn 2008 to celebrate its 50 years in the Karlsplatz building the Vienna Museum published a list of highlights of its history 4 including the following 23 April 1959 Formal opening of the Historical Museum building and of the first special exhibition on Hieronymus Loschenkohl by President Adolf Scharf 1960 Exhibition on the Vienna Municipal Armoury 1961 Opening of the permanent exhibition on the Art and History of Vienna 1963 Exhibition on Otto Wagner The Architects Oeuvre 1964 Opening of Prater Museum exhibition on Vienna circa 1900 1968 Exhibition on Joseph Olbrich 1969 Exhibition on Vienna 1800 1850 Empire and Biedermeier 1970 Opening of Beethoven memorial in Heiligenstadt 1973 Exhibition on 1850 1900 World of the Ringstrasse 1974 1986 Free entrance to the museum and its annexes 1977 Exhibition on Vindobona The Romans in the Vienna area 1979 Renovated Hermesvilla becomes a unit of the Museums of the City of Vienna one of the demolition threatened Stadtbahn pavilions by Otto Wagner in Karlsplatz is transferred to the museum 1980 Exhibition on The Vienna Coffeehouse From the beginnings to between the wars 1981 106 000 people visit the Egon Schiele exhibition with works from the Serge Sabarsky collection 1982 Neidhart Frescoes become a new museum annexe 1983 First large scale exhibition in the Kunstlerhaus on The Turks at the gates of Vienna curated by Hans Hollein 1985 Large scale exhibition on Dream and Reality Vienna 1870 1930 curated by Hans Hollein a record breaking 622 000 visitors 1986 Exhibition on Elisabeth of Austria Loneliness power and freedom at Hermesvilla 1987 Exhibition on Biedermeier and Vormarz in the Kunstlerhaus curated by Boris Podrecca 1989 Exhibition on Arnulf Rainer which travels on to New York City and Chicago 1993 Exhibition on Red Vienna 1995 Exhibition on Hans Hollein 1997 Exhibition on Franz Schubert curated by Hermann Czech 1999 Exhibitions on Rebuilt Vienna 1800 2000 Projects for the metropolis Johann Strauss Thunder and lightning 2000 Atrium extension and roofing over by Dimitris Manikas exhibition on Hans Makart Painter prince at Hermesvilla Cooperation established with Nagoya City Museum 2002 Separation of the Historical Museum of the City of Vienna from city government 2003 Renamed Vienna Museum 2004 Exhibition on Gastarbajteri 40 years of worker migration large scale exhibition on Old Vienna the city that never was Kunstlerhaus 2006 Renovation by BMW Architekten new entrance area additional exhibition space 2007 Exhibitions on In the Tavern At the Bottom The discovery of misery 2008 Opening of the Museum of the Romans in Hoher Markt 2009 Reopening of renovated Haydn House 2009 2010 Large scale exhibition at the Kunstlerhaus Battle for the City Politics art and everyday life circa 1930 2018 Exhibition on Otto WagnerCollection highlights edit nbsp Vienna Battle 1683 by Frans Geffels nbsp Loge im Sofiensaal by Josef Engelhart nbsp Family portrait of the imperial family by Leopold Fertbauer nbsp Arthur Roessler by Egon Schiele nbsp Court Ball at the Hofburg by Wilhelm Gause nbsp Woman in a Yellow Dress 1899 by Max Kurzweil nbsp Arnold Schonberg by Richard Gerstl nbsp Kara Mustafa Pasha nbsp Simplicity of the highest degree by Franz Xaver Messerschmidt nbsp Portrait of Emilie Louise Floge by Gustav Klimt nbsp Self portrait by Anton FaistauerHermesvilla edit nbsp HermesvillaSince 1971 exhibitions have been presented in the Hermesvilla a former imperial residence in the Lainzer Tiergarten in the west of Vienna which Emperor Franz Joseph had built for his wife Empress Elisabeth in 1882 86 Under former mayor Bruno Marek the building was restored by the Association of Friends of the Hermesvilla and subsequently taken over by the city The permanent exhibition is dedicated to the history of the building and the imperial couple who spent a few days there each year until Elisabeth s death In addition special exhibitions are mounted on a wide variety of themes in cultural history Special museums editOtto Wagner Pavilion on Karlsplatz edit nbsp Since 2005 a permanent exhibition on the life and work of Otto Wagner has been on show in this former Vienna Stadtbahn building The building was constructed in 1898 as one of a pair of Jugendstil pavilions on either side of the square as part of the construction of the Stadtbahn in the 1890s Otto Wagner was the contract designer of the system During the planning in the 1960s for the new Vienna U Bahn nodal station at Karlsplatz the two pavilions were saved from demolition dismantled restored and put back in place in 1977 after completion of the construction work in the square They no longer serve any transport purpose Otto Wagner Hofpavillon at Hietzing edit nbsp The Pavillon des k u k Allerhochsten Hofes Pavilion of the royal and imperial court in Hietzing near Schonbrunn Palace was built in 1899 to Otto Wagner s design as a special station for the use of the Emperor and members of his court when using the Stadtbahn It was not included in the original plans for the Stadtbahn but Wagner began construction on his own initiative and was finally able to win over the Minister for Railways Heinrich von Wittek In contrast to the other Stadtbahn stations this pavilion with its cupola has baroque elements which could be interpreted as a sign of respect for the Emperor on the architect s part It was built at the inbound end of the platform at the Hietzing station which opened in 1898 originally there were steps linking it to the public platforms The Emperor is only known to have used the station on two occasions in 1899 when he opened the lower Vienna Valley line on the Stadtbahn between Meidling Hauptstrasse and Hauptzollamt and in April 1902 Today the imperial waiting room and study and other rooms in the building are on permanent display Prater Museum edit The Prater Museum is located in the Prater park in the planetarium building near the Ferris wheel It presents the history of Vienna s largest amusement park the Wurstelprater with exhibits such as an old mechanical fortune teller and coverage of dark rides and sideshows The museum was founded in 1933 by the teacher and local historian Hans Pemmer in his home and donated in 1964 to the City of Vienna which built the present museum 5 Clock Museum edit nbsp Entrance to Clock Museum in Palais ObizziThe Vienna Clock Museum in the Palais Obizzi in the Innere Stadt founded in 1917 is one of the most important of its kind on Europe On the ground floor are displayed the collections of the museum s first and long time director Rudolf Kaftan and of the poet Marie von Ebner Eschenbach During the Second World War the House of Ten Thousand Clocks as it is also known was closed and attempts were made to disperse the valuable clocks for safety to various castles in Lower Austria with only partial success After the war work began on rebuilding the collection thanks to funds from the City of Vienna and private donations it has been possible to add a few additional rarities to the collection 6 Fashion collection library edit The Vienna Museum has a fashion collection in Meidling adjacent to the Vienna School of Fashion at Schloss Hetzendorf This is not open to the public but the public may use the attached library consisting of over 12 000 volumes and numerous periodicals photographs and approximately 3 000 engravings on the subject of fashion Musicians residences editThe Vienna Museum includes numerous residences in which notable composers lived were born and died which are largely in original condition and intended to afford the visitor insight into the artists everyday lives Exhibits include music manuscripts but also objects they used Mozart residence edit The rooms in the Mozarthaus Vienna in Domgasse near St Stephen s Cathedral are the only one of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart s residences in Vienna to have been preserved and the original furnishings have not been preserved Mozart lived here from 1784 to 1787 during which time he composed among other works his opera The Marriage of Figaro for which reason the house is also known today as the Figaro House The flat has been open to visitors for decades it was reopened in early 2006 after renovation The house has several floors of exhibition space including objects such as the desk at which Mozart supposedly composed The Magic Flute Beethoven residence in Heiligenstadt edit nbsp Beethoven residence in HeiligenstadtLudwig van Beethoven spent the summer of 1802 in a house in Heiligenstadt which at the time was a suburb of Vienna There was a spa where Beethoven attempted to reduce or cure his increasing deafness During this stay he worked on compositions including his Second Symphony but also in an episode of depression and despair about the state of his hearing wrote his Heiligenstadt Testament According to oral tradition the house was Herrengasse 6 now Probusgasse 6 this is however disputed since at the time there were no registration records for the suburbs of Vienna and Beethoven s own letters do not mention the address Eroica House edit The Eroica House is a memorial to Beethoven s stay in Oberdobling in the summer of 1803 during which he composed a large part of his Eroica Symphony However Beethoven never stayed in the house Josef Bock Gnadenau misidentified the building because he was unaware that the houses were re numbered in 1804 rather than 1802 In 1872 Alexander Wheelock Thayer had identified the correct house Hofzeile 15 which no longer exists Pasqualati House edit In 1804 08 and 1810 14 Beethoven lived at the house of his patron Johann Baptist Freiherr von Pasqualati on the Molker Bastei Molk Bastion a remnant of the old city walls in the Innere Stadt Here he composed among other works the Fifth and Sixth Symphonies Fur Elise the Archduke Trio and his only opera Fidelio Since Beethoven s actual flat in the north section of the fourth floor has a tenant the next door flat is on show as the Beethoven exhibit Haydn House edit nbsp Haydn House around 1840In 1793 Joseph Haydn acquired the house which is now Haydngasse 19 in Mariahilf and lived there until his death in 1809 The original address was Kleine Steingasse 71 changed in 1795 to 73 and it was located in the hamlet of Obere Windmuhle which was part of the outlying town of Windmuhle but was almost entirely surrounded by the larger town of Gumpendorf and was part of its parish Here Haydn composed among other works the oratorios The Creation and The Seasons In 1862 the street was renamed for its most famous residents and the house has been a memorial since 1899 and a museum since 1904 In one of the rooms Johannes Brahms composing desk is on display In 2009 the 200th anniversary year of Haydn s death the permanent exhibition was recast and enlarged it emphasizes the composer s last years Birthplace of Franz Schubert edit nbsp Schubert birthplace in AlsergrundMain article Schubert s birthplace Franz Schubert spent the first four and a half years of his life in this house in Nussdorfer Strasse in Himmelpfortgrund in what is now Alsergrund the 9th district of Vienna One important exhibit is Schubert s trademark glasses The house also has on display approximately 50 paintings by Adalbert Stifter who was better known as an author Schubert s death place edit Schubert spent only the last two and a half months of his life in his brother Ferdinand s flat in Kettenbruckengasse in Wieden where he died in 1828 Exhibits include his last drafts of compositions and a copy of the last letter he wrote by hand to Franz von Schober Johann Strauss residence edit The flat in Praterstrasse in Leopoldstadt was the residence of Johann Strauss the Younger in the 1860s Here he composed among other works the Blue Danube waltz whose first notes traditionally inaugurate the New Year for the Viennese Archaeological excavations editThe Vienna Museum includes a number of archaeological sites which document various periods in the history of the city All are located in the Innere Stadt Michaelerplatz excavations edit nbsp Michaelerplatz excavationsArchaeological excavations in the Michaelerplatz between 1989 and 1991 uncovered among other things the settlement of Canabae associated with the Roman camp at Vindobona This will have consisted primarily of the residences of soldiers wives and children The excavation site was made permanently accessible to the public in 1991 the design of the presentation is by architect Hans Hollein Vergilius Chapel edit The Vergilius Chapel near St Stephen s Cathedral was built around 1250 but in the 14th century became a crypt for a wealthy family In 1732 the cathedral graveyard was abandoned and in 1781 the adjacent Chapel of St Mary Magdalene burnt down following which the Vergilius Chapel was filled in and eventually forgotten It now lies approximately 12 metres under the Stephansplatz and was rediscovered in 1973 during the building of the U Bahn it is now integrated into the Stephansplatz station and can be reached from there Museum of the Romans edit nbsp Remains of a hypocaust from a Roman house at Museum of the RomansIn the Hoher Markt north of Stephansplatz excavated ruins of houses which served as officers quarters in Vindobona are on display together with exhibits of ceramic ware gravestones and other objects which illuminate life 2 000 years ago in the Roman camp and attached town This museum annexe previously known as the Roman Ruins was expanded and reopened in May 2008 as the Museum of the Romans 7 Roman ruins under fire headquarters edit In the cellar of the fire headquarters in Am Hof are the remains of a main drainage canal which once carried effluent from the southern section of the Roman camp to the brook which is now the street Tiefer Graben Preserved in original condition they were discovered in the 1950s during excavations for the foundations when the fire headquarters destroyed by World War II bombing were being rebuilt At a depth of almost 3 metres ruins of a wall of the Roman camp a wall tower part of a street which ran beside the wall and an approximately 5 metre stretch of the canal below the wall were uncovered 8 Neidhart frescoes edit The Neidhart frescoes are in a 14th century building in Tuchlauben and are the oldest surviving secular wall paintings in Vienna The cycle of paintings were executed in 1398 on the walls of a then banqueting room on a commission from the wealthy merchant Michel Menschein For the most part they show scenes from the life of the minnesinger Neidhart von Reuental They were discovered in 1979 under a layer of plaster when the building was being renovated and have been on view to the public since 1982 9 References edit Juli 1953 Der Wettbewerb fur den Museumsneubau Wien im Ruckblick in German November 1953 Museum der Stadt Wien Die erste Besichtigung der Wettbewerbsentwurfe Wien im Ruckblick in German Memorandum of understanding and cooperation between the Nagoya City Museum and the Historical Museum of Vienna at Wikimedia Commons in German 1959 2009 50 Jahre Geschichte mit Zukunft Exhibition catalogue Wien Museum Karlsplatz in German Prof Hans Pemmer der unermudliche Volksbildner Archived 2014 04 19 at the Wayback Machine Bezirksmuseum Landstrasse Die Wiener Bezirksmuseen Museen net in German Juni 1947 Das Haus der zehntausend Uhren Wien im Ruckblick in German Die Romer kommen nach Wien ORF 10 May 2008 in German Juli 1958 Ein romischer Kanal unter der Feuerwehrzentrale Wien im Ruckblick in German Neidhart Fresken Burgenkunde at in German External links editVienna Museum homepage in German Vienna Museum English homepage Interactive 360 x 180 panorama of Vienna Museum Karlsplatz requires Flash Vienna Museum within Google Arts amp Culture nbsp Media related to Wien Museum at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vienna Museum amp oldid 1175937856, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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