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Tapestries from England

Place:
Primatial Palace, Primatial Square 3

Opening hours: daily except Mondays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Admittion: 40,- Sk

Children, students admition free

Tel: +4212 5935 6394

 

The Primate's Palace, considered to be the most beautiful Classicist building in Bratislava, was built by the Archbishop and Cardinal Jozef Batthyány after the design of the architect Melchior Hefele in 1778. The palace and its famous Hall of Mirrors became the scene of many major historic events. The Peace Treaty of Pressburg between Austria and France was signed there in 1805, the opening session of the Hungarian Parliament, which had its seat in the present building of the University Library, took place there as well.

The city bought the palace in August 1903. During reconstruction, a series of six unknown tapestries was found folded behind wallpaper, depicting the ancient legend of Hero and Leander, illustrating their tragic love. The tapestries were woven in the 1630s in the royal weaving workshop at Mortlake near London, run by the Dutch Phillip de Maecht. The designs and tapestries created by Franz Cleyn reflect Flemish and partially Italian painting from the period of Mannerism.

Apart from English tapestries, the grand halls of the Primate's Palace show several smaller exhibitions of paintings from the collections of Bratislava City Gallery - a collection of 17th century Dutch and Flemish genre painting and the exhibition of 16th and 17th century Italian painting.

gobelin_Leandro priplaval k Here.jpg.jpg

Hero meets Leander. about 1630. Wool, silk, 310 x 340cm.

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Use of the artworks free of charge without the permission of the carrier of the copyrights is possible only for advertising of the exhibition.

The photographs of the works of art, which are published on the webpage of GMB advertise individual exhibitions held in GMB, underlie the protection of author’s rights according the law of copyright. GMB is not the owner of the copyrights; it is the author, respectively his inheritors. The artwork becomes free after more than 70 years after the author’s death. The user can use the photographs of the published artworks only with the previous agreement of the author, respectively of the inheritor or the institution representing the rights of the author; otherwise the personal author’s rights are being breached.