Moskovits Adolf and Sons Palace
A 1911 Viennese-Secession palace in Oradea by the Vágó brothers, a landmark of the city’s Art Nouveau.
A 1911 Viennese-Secession palace in Oradea by the Vágó brothers, a landmark of the city’s Art Nouveau.
The only Secession building on Ljubljana’s Prešeren Square, refaced in 1904 in bands of bright geometric tile.
Porto’s Belle Époque coffee house of 1921, an Art Nouveau room of carved wood, mirrors and leather on the Rua Santa Catarina.
A 1912 Secession townhouse in Oradea by the Vágó brothers, now Romania’s first Art Nouveau museum.
A 1905 Oradea palace in the Munich Secession (Lilienstil) by Kálmán Rimanóczy Jr., a landmark of the city’s Art Nouveau.
A 1903 Hungarian Secession palace covered in Zsolnay majolica and folk-art ornament, now a museum and gallery.
A 1907 Szeged palace by Ede Magyar, a flowing Hungarian Art Nouveau masterpiece on the theme of water, now an art centre.
A 1910 Hungarian Secession town hall in Serbia, ablaze with Zsolnay ceramics, folk motifs and stained glass.
One of the finest Art Nouveau synagogues in the world (1902), a Hungarian Secession masterpiece in Serbia.
A 1913 Hungarian Secession culture palace in Transylvania, famous for its Hall of Mirrors and stained glass.