Kunsthistorisches Museum

Imperial museum · 1871–1891 · Vienna, Austria

Kunsthistorisches Museum

The Kunsthistorisches Museum (Museum of Art History) in Vienna is one of the largest and most important art museums in the world, housing the imperial collections of the Habsburg dynasty assembled over four centuries. Designed by Gottfried Semper and Karl von Hasenauer in the Italian High-Renaissance style and opened in 1891, the museum occupies a palatial building facing the Maria-Theresien-Platz on the Vienna Ringstrasse, directly mirroring the Natural History Museum across the square. Its collections include masterworks by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Raphael, Titian, Velázquez, Caravaggio, and Vermeer, alongside one of the world’s finest assemblages of ancient Egyptian, Greek, and Roman art and a renowned collection of decorative arts and armour.

At a glance

Type
Imperial art museum (state museum)
Period
Construction 1871–1891; opened 17 October 1891
Style
Italian High Renaissance Revival (Historicism)
Architects
Gottfried Semper (concept) and Karl von Hasenauer (execution)
Location
Maria-Theresien-Platz, 1010 Vienna, Austria
Coordinates
48.2038° N, 16.3596° E

Overview

The Kunsthistorisches Museum was conceived to house the Habsburg imperial collections in a setting worthy of their scope and quality, and to make them accessible to the citizens of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Its Picture Gallery on the first floor is particularly celebrated for holding the world’s largest collection of paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (twelve works), as well as exceptional groupings of Venetian Renaissance, Dutch Golden Age, and Spanish Baroque masters. The building itself is considered a work of art: the grand staircase is decorated with spandrel paintings by Gustav Klimt, executed when the young artist was commissioned for the project in 1890–1891.

History

The Habsburg collections had been dispersed across palaces and treasuries for centuries before Emperor Franz Joseph I commissioned Semper and Hasenauer in the 1860s to create a permanent public home for them on the new Ringstrasse. Construction began in 1871 and proceeded in parallel with the twin Natural History Museum; the two symmetrical buildings were designed to frame the Maria-Theresien-Platz with an equestrian statue of Empress Maria Theresa at its centre. Emperor Franz Joseph opened the KHM on 17 October 1891 in the presence of the imperial court. After the fall of the monarchy in 1918, the collections became state property and the museum continued to expand its holdings through purchase and transfer.

What you see

The Picture Gallery (Gemäldegalerie) is arranged by national school across fourteen rooms, with particular strengths in the Flemish and Dutch Old Masters, the Italian Renaissance, and the Spanish school. The Kunstkammer on the ground floor displays Habsburg curiosities, goldsmiths’ work, and decorative objects including the Saliera of Benvenuto Cellini. The Egyptian and Near Eastern Collection, the Greek and Roman Antiquities, and the Imperial Armoury are also housed within the building. The octagonal cupola hall at the centre of the museum, with its painted ceiling and marble columns, serves as a dramatic space for special exhibitions and evening events.

Cultural significance

The KHM is consistently ranked among the top ten art museums in the world by visitor numbers and scholarly importance, and its Picture Gallery has shaped the canon of Western art history through its unrivalled concentration of Old Master paintings in a single location. The Klimt spandrel paintings in the staircase have become emblematic of the museum’s identity and are considered among the artist’s earliest mature works.

Practical information

Address
Maria-Theresien-Platz, 1010 Vienna, Austria
Opening hours
Tuesday–Sunday 10:00–18:00; Thursday until 21:00; closed Monday. Hours may vary for special exhibitions — check the official website.
Admission
Full-price tickets apply; reduced rates for seniors, students, and children under 19 free

Getting there

The museum is located on the Ringstrasse, a 10-minute walk from Vienna’s historic centre. The nearest metro stations are Volkstheater (U2/U3) and Museumsquartier (U2), each about 5 minutes on foot. Tram lines 1, 2, 71, and D serve the Ringstrasse. From Wien Hauptbahnhof, take the U1 to Karlsplatz and change to the U2 toward Museumsquartier (three stops).

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