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==> 17 Einträge gefunden / entries found

János Fridrich Photographer´s Workshop

Kossuth L. Utca 6
HU-6600 Szentes (Csongrád)


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Info Telefon: +36-63 400 649
Besucher-Email: rg@szentesinfo.hu
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
Built in 1905 and refurbished in 1997, the Fridrich photographer's workshop (where exhibitions of industrial history are also held) is the only photographers workshop in Hungary outside Budapest. In the building of great local significance you can see photographs by János Fridrich, his daughters and various other Szentes photographers. You can also see photographers' tools and equipment. The photos and post-cards that are part of the local historical collection of the Szentes Museum are also stored in the building. You can also see here a great number of volumes of literature on photography and art history as well as photo albums.
 



Koszta József-Museum

Széchenyi Liget 1
HU-6600 Szentes (Csongrád)


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Kontakt / Contact:
Fax.: +36-63 313 352

Info Telefon: +36-63 313 352
Besucher-Email: muzeum@szentesinfo.hu   
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
The local historical collection of the József Koszta Museum in Szentes can be found in two separate buildings of historical value. The buildings function under the supervision of the museum management.
 



Peter Paul Urban House

Petöfi utca 9
HU-6600 Szentes (Csongrád)


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Kontakt / Contact:
Fax.: +36-63 316 678

Info Telefon: +36-63 316 678
Besucher-Email: rg@szentesinfo.hu
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
Built in neo-classic style, the Pál Péter urban house was built in a street corner in around 1830. The building is decorated with Tuscanian columns; it has a garden, a guesthouse and a cellar. It is an early representative of brick buildings in the Hungarian Plain (address: 9 Petõfi street, Szentes). In the house you can see urban artefacts and documents from the town of Szentes from 1836-1945. You can also see documents that belonged to the Péter family and their friends as well as interesting documents from the period of Communist rule. In the main building in a guided tour you can see artefacts from the history of medicine, musical instruments and various textile materials. In the building you can also find some local historical slides, an audio and video collection as well as a storehouse and a conventional library. The building also contains the archives for the Csongrád county library. In the closed porch and the garden you can see medicinal herbs and plants; in the yard you can see a collection of stones. Temporary exhibitions are arranged in the cellar.

Picture: Viticultural/wine-maker equipment in the wine cellar of the "Péter Pál ház" (Peter Paul House).
 



Museum House

Gyökér u. 1
HU-6640 Csongrád (Csongrád)


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Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
every day except for Monday from 1-5 pm. between 01/05 and 31/10.


 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
Old fishermen and digers' buildings.
Arranged by Judit Szucs at al. in 1985, the museum house is furnished with rural furniture that was used by local fishermen, boaters, boat-builders and smallholders. Most houses in the inner town of Csongrád had a gable decorated with perpendicular planks. The planks were made by local carpenters from logs felled in the Carpathian Mountains and drifted in the form of log rafts to the town of Csongrád on the river Tisza. The museum house was restored as a building with two windows at the front.

In the "öregház" (old house) at the back you can see furniture from the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. The kitchen in the old house, suitable for baking bread, has an open chimney. On the bench in the porch you can see water jugs beside the cooking pots. People used the water jugs for carrying water from the river Tisza to the house. They had to let the sediment settle at the bottom of the jugs before they could drink the water. In the room there are painted pieces of furniture in the corners. You can see how rural women pressed the freshly washed clothes in those days on the table. The "nagyház" (large living-room) is furnished with furniture from the 1930s. You can see various pieces of furniture in the corners, just like in the old house; in one corner you can see earthenware stove, and, perpendicularly to it on the opposite side, you can see a table and a sofa. In the room you can also see bedclothes embroidered with white thread and a nicely decorated curtain. There are cloths decorated with lacework on the chest of drawers and on the "turreted" chest. The oldest member of the family rested on the bed with no bedclothes during the day, and also at night. People did not stay or sleep in this "clean house" or living room. They only used it on holidays.

In the larder, which is situated slightly below the level of the kitchen and the living room, you can see furniture that was used by three generations. You can also see tools that earth-workers used and various vessels for wine storage in the larder. The vessels for wine storage indicate the fact that each family owned a small vineyard as a result of which they had some wine in the house. Local people were also excellent earth-workers, hence the earth-workers' tools in the larder.
 



Tari László-Museum

Iskola utca 2
HU-6640 Csongrád (Csongrád)


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Kontakt / Contact:
Fax.: +36-63 481 052

Info Telefon: +36-63 483 103
Besucher-Email: info@mfm.u-szeged.hu   
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
Tuesday to Friday: 1 pm. till 5 pm. on Saturday: 8 am. till 12 am.
on Sunday: 8am. till 12am. and 1pm. till 5pm. Closed on Monday

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
The first collections in the town of Csongrád were established in the middle of the 19th century. One of these collections was a collection of natural sciences established in a school. László Kertész, a lawyer by profession, mayor of Csongrád, established a collection of birds and birds' eggs. At the end of the 19th century Imre Szivák, a Member of Parliament, donated some local guild artefacts to the Museum of Applied Arts. In the museum there is a note from 1927 on some artefacts collected by Sándor Farkas between 1924 and 1926 (3,089 artefacts registered under registration number 617).

The artefacts, objects and books of great value that were preserved in various institutions and schools, were moved to the municipal museum that started functioning in October 1956. In the newly established museum museologist created archaeological, local historical and ethnographical collections. Today these collections contain about 10-12 thousand artefacts respectively.

In 1989 the museum was named after László Tari, a dentist, who was also an amateur local historian.

During the past five years two meetings and two international ethnographical student seminars have been held in the museum. A permanent exhibition entitled "Bronze Age Culture in Csongrád County", and "Local History and Rural Life in the Town of Csongrád" was opened in 2000.

Picture: Street front facade of the László Tari Museum before 1976.
 



Kass-Gallery

Vár utca 7
HU-6720 Szeged (Csongrád)


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Info Telefon: +36-62 420 303
Besucher-Email: info@mfm.u-szeged.hu   
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Träger/Financial provider:
Municipality of Szeged, operated by the Ferenc Móra Museum

 
Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 5 pm. Closed on Monday
Summer time opening hours: between 01/07 and 30/09 Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 6 pm.
Closed on Monday.

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
The Kass Gallery was opened in Vár utca (Vár street) in Szeged in 1985. The gallery displays the works of art by János Kass. The artist was born in Szeged, and has been awarded several prizes during his career. So far he has been awarded with the Munkácsy-prize twice, and he has won the title "Meritful Artist" and "Outstanding Artist".

János Kass graduated from the College of Applied Arts in 1946, and got himself a degree of Master of Ceramics. He attended the College of Fine Arts between 1949 and 1951, and graduated in Graphic Art in 1951. In 1967 he was invited to teach at the Department of Graphic Art at the College of Fine Arts.

He won a silver medal at the World Exhibition in Brussels in 1958. He was awarded prizes in Moscow, Brno, Toronto, Bratislava, Sao Paulo, and at contests entitled "Beautiful Books" in Germany and in Hungary. He was awarded the prize for the "Best book in the World" and also a gold medal at a book exhibition in Leipzig in 1966.

In the Kass Gallery significant series of prints made by the artist such as Kékszakáll ("Bluebeard"), Az ember tragédiája ("The Tragedy of Man"), "The Bible","Hamlet" and selected works from the series entitled Fejek ("Heads") are exhibited. Besides these works some of his individual pieces of graphic art are also exhibited.

Following the enlargement of the exhibition area in the gallery in 1991, several temporary exhibitions have also been arranged in the gallery.
 



Móra Ferenc Múzeum

Roosevelt tér 3
HU-6720 Szeged (Csongrád)


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Móra Ferenc-Museum

Roosevelt tér 1-3
HU-6720 Szeged (Csongrád)


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Kontakt / Contact:
Fax.: +36-62 549 061

Info Telefon: +36-62 549 040
Besucher-Email: info@mfm.u-szeged.hu   
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 5 pm. Closed on Monday
Summer time opening hours: between 01/07 and 30/09 Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 6 pm.
Closed on Monday.

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
In 1897, one year after the Palace for Public Education was completed; a gallery of historical paintings was opened in Szeged. The collection of portraits, paintings, drawings and etchings, the first pieces of which dated from 1851, became the core of the art collection in the Ferenc Móra museum, which later on rose to national significance. Today the collection comprehensively illustrates the various trends in panel picture painting in Hungary in the 19th-20th centuries.

The pictures by László Petrovics, Ignác Roskovics and Pál Vágó, which commemorate the great flood of 1879, are of significant local historical importance. An outstanding piece of art in the collection is a coloured sketch by Mihály Munkácsy, entitled "The Hungarian Conquest", which the town authorities purchased directly from the artist in 1895.

The institution purchased several works of art from significant artists such as Gusztáv Kelety, László Mednyánszky, Béla Iványi-Grünwald, József Koszta, Adolf Fényes and Simon Hollósy between 1900 and 1920. The list of artists indicates the fact that each significant trend and artist in the history of Hungarian painting is represented in the collection by at least one picture. The picture collection was significantly enlarged in 1937, when Dezsõ Ambrozovics, a literary translator and art collector, donated his collection of more than 250 pieces of art, mainly paintings, to the museum. Through this generous donation the collection was enriched by pictures by great artists like Gyula Aggházi, Sándor Bihari, László Hegedûs, László Mednyánszky, József Rippl-Rónai, Gyula Rudnay, Bertalan Székely and Károly Telepy.

By regular purchases and donations by the Hungarian Art Foundation in the past fifty years, the picture collection has been enlarged by pieces of art representing contemporary Hungarian trends. The museum has paid special attention to the collection of pieces of art by local artists; the works have mainly been purchased at the Szeged Summer Exhibitions and at the Bi-Annual Exhhibitions of Panel Paintings. It is a unique phenomenon that almost the entire life-work of art by László Vinkler, doyen of art life in Szeged, is in the possession of the museum through the donation of the widow of the artist to the Ferenc Móra Museum.

Picture: Pál Vágó: The Great Flood in Szeged.
 



The Black House

Somogyi Béla utca 13
HU-6720 Szeged (Csongrád)


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Kontakt / Contact:
Fax.: +36-62 425 872

Info Telefon: +36-62 425 872
Besucher-Email: feketehaz@mail.tiszanet.hu   
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Öffnungszeiten/Opening hours
Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 5 pm. Closed on Monday
Summer time opening hours: between 01/07 and 30/09 Tuesday to Sunday: 10 am. till 6 pm.
Closed on Monday.

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
According to normal practices in Hungary, first a joint collection of archaeological and historical artefacts and coins was created in Szeged. At first various historical artefacts were randomly donated to the museum, which were then registered together with archaeological artefacts. The number of objects of great local historical importance, such as seals, pieces of clothing and guild flags, grew slowly; they were not collected in a methodological way.

Veteran soldiers, who came home from the front line in the Great War, brought back several objects and souvenirs that reminded them of their native town, Szeged, when they fought far away from home. These objects also reminded the soldiers of the importance of fighting for their homeland in foreign parts of the world. The local authorities donated these objects to the town museum in a ceremony in autumn, 1918. Ferenc Móra, who was director of the museum at that time, decided to open a separate logbook for the registration of the high number of artefacts (December 6th 1918).

Artefacts were not collected in an organised and methodological way in the period between the two World Wars. At the beginning of the 1950s, when the municipal library and the museum were separated, the collection started to grow gradually. A logbook created according to the new principles for the registration of the history of the town was opened in 1955. Significant structural changes occurred when the Department of History was created in 1978 to encompass the Historical Collection. The new Department moved to the building called "Fekete ház" (Black House) at Somogyi utca (street) 18 in 1980, where exhibition halls and offices for research activities were created in the building. The Department collects artefacts from the period between the later part of the mediaeval period and modern times. It is also the responsibility of the Department to collect and document artefacts representing the history of the town, artefacts and objects that reflect the changes in the life-style of local people in the period between the late Middle ages and today. The museologists at the department collect objects and documents that belonged to renowned personalities, who lived and worked in Szeged. They also collect objects and documents that belonged to various organisations, such as charity organisations in health care, workers' unions, the local units of the Social Democratic Party and the Communist Party. The Department also maintains the historical documents of various local companies and factories with special regard to documents that record the activities of workers in the construction industry and the life and work of agricultural labourers.

The Department of History has published the writings of its researchers in an independent volume of articles entitled "Történeti tanulmányok" (Historical Studies - Studia Historica) since 1995.

The title of the permanent exhibition organised by the Department is "Csongrád és Csanád megye társadalma" (1867-1945) (Social Development in Csongrád and Csanád county between 1867 and 1945.) At the exhibition you can see how life changed in the area between 1867 and 1945. Due to reconstruction activities in the fortified castle of Szeged the permanent exhibition of the history of town arranged in that building was closed in 1998. Therefore the permanent exhibition organised in Fekete ház was enlarged to give an overview of the historical development in the whole of Csongrád county.
 



The Lucs Collection

HU-6720 Szeged (Csongrád)


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Info Telefon: +36-62 421 948
Besucher-Email: info@mfm.u-szeged.hu
http://www.mfm.u-szeged.hu...

 
Sammelschwerpunkte/Main collections
The art collection of a local art collector of great renown, Ferenc Lucs, nearly fifty works of art, became part of the art collection in the Ferenc Móra Museum in summer, 1978. The Lucs-collection, which is under protection, contains fine works of art by the most significant masters of Hungarian fine art in the 19th and 20th centuries. The pictures are exhibited at a permanent exhibition in the Ferenc Móra Museum, where the visitors get a comprehensive and convincing impression of trends in Hungarian painting in the 20th century; in the collection works of art by Pál Szinnyei Merse and Jeno Barcsay illustrate the development of painting in Hungary from the 19th century until today.

"Madárdal" (Bird's Song, 1871-72), a painting by Pál Merse Szinnyei as a young artist, is one of the most outstanding works of art in the collection. The founders of the "Nagybányai Muvésztelep" (Artists' Community at Nagybánya), are also represented by some pictures. Among them you can see "Virágcsendélet" (Still Life with Flowers) by Károly Ferenczy, "Leány és fiú" (Girl and Boy) by Oszkár Glatz, "Feleségem" (My Wife) by János Thorma. You can also see decorative, impressionist pictures by István Csók, such as "Thámár", and by Izsák Perlmutter, such as "Gyümölcs-csendélet" (Still Life with Fruit). Lajos Deák-Ébner represents the most significant painters in the artists' community at Szolnok with his canvas entitled "Patakban mosó no" (Woman Washing Clothes in a Stream). The artistic trends in the artists' community in the Hungarian Plain are truly reflected by the following pictures: "Népoktatás a tanyán" (Class on the Farm) by János Tornyai, "Annuska" by József Koszta and "Legelészo bárányok" (Grazing Sheep) by István Nagy. "Rügyezo fák" (Budding Trees), a picture by László Mednyánszky, aptly illustrates the style of the artist. The Hungarian interpretation of modern French art trends are illustrated by various pictures by József Rippl-Rónai, János Vaszary, Béla Czóbel and Ödön Márffy.

 



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