By all accounts, this is the biggest project of the exhibition season in Croatia and a great sensation.The whole art world and only one story: the sculpture "L'Homme qui marche" from the 1961st Alberto Giacometti was sold at auction Sotheby'su for 104, 6 million, or 65 million pounds, still anonymous buyer, who is the auction house described as "a modest man "
Giacometti's "L'Homme qui marche" has become the most expensive, not only paid for a sculpture in history, but also paid the most expensive works of art, because it is broken down a record that was held by Picasso, "Boy with a pipe." "It was whispering to 35 million pounds to 50 pounds a laugh," telling those who were at the auction.
Now one version of the celebrated "L'Homme qui marche" soon be able to see in Croatia. Namely, in Dubrovnik in the Art Gallery in June, the exhibition will be opened with as many as 180 works of art of the famous sculptor, confirmed the director of this gallery Antun Maračić. He added that this is a difficult exhibition of around 18 million Swiss francs, or 90 million.
By all accounts, this is the biggest project of the exhibition season in Croatia and a great sensation.
The exhibition is organized in collaboration with the Alberto Giacometti Foundation in Zurich and will be opened three months during the summer. In addition to sculptures, will be shown and Giacometti lithographic cycle called "Paris" without end "and will be exposed, and photos of Ernst Scheidegera. This Magnumov photographer was a friend and it Giacometti's photographed in a number of work, but intimate moments.
Curator of the exhibition was that Franziska Lentuzch in Dubrovnik comes from the Kunsthaus Zurich, under whose jurisdiction the Giacometti Foundation. This is a donation from the artist's wife and his greatest love, Annette, and there are preserved all the important works of art made in all periods of his work, and documentation of his life: the early impact of Cubism and African art, through surrealism, when the sculpture is charged symbolism and eroticism until the turning point and the most important periods in its creation: elongated human figures.
http://www.ugdubrovnik.hr
Dubrovnik Museums
The Dubrovnik Museums came into being on 5th February 1872 with the foundation of the Dubrovnik Regional Museum. The main initiators were the Chamber of Commerce and its chairman Antun Drobac (1810-1882), a pharmacist, natural historian and collector of natural history specimens, who became the lifetime chairman and the first curator of the museum.
The Dubrovnik Regional Museum was the fourth to be set up in Croatia. Housed on the first floor of the Town Hall building, it was inaugurated in April 1873. A valuable natural history collection represented the nucleus of the museum to which a culturological, a historical, and an archaeological collections were soon added.
In 1932, the museum collections were moved to St. John's Castle, while in 1940 the collection of stone monuments and the ethnological collection were relocated to what was formerly Rupe Granary. The cultural history collection (later a separate department) was moved to the Rector's Palace in 1948.
Permanent Collection - Dubrovnik Museums
ARCHAEOLOGY MUSEUM
CULTURAL HISTORY MUSEUM RECTOR'S PALACE
MARITIME MUSEUM
The Marin Drzic Home houses
MODERN HISTORY MUSEUM
ETHNOGRAPHIC MUSEUM
http://www.mdc.hr/dubrovnik/eng/opci.html