he Museum für Angewandte Kunst Köln (German for Museum of Applied Art, abbreviated MAKK) is a decorative arts museum in Cologne, Germany. The collections include jewellery, porcelain, furniture, weaponry and architectural exhibits. Until 1987 it was called the Kunstgewerbemuseum (Decorative Art Museum).
The city of Cologne decided to found an applied art museum in 1888. The core of the exhibition originally came from the collections of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf (1748–1824) and Matthias Joseph de Noël (1782–1849), and the exhibition was soon expanded through endowments. The museum's original location was a Neo-Gothic building on the Hansaring, built in 1900, but this was destroyed by bombs in 1943.
he plain, red-brick Schwarz-Bernhard building stands on the site of a former Conventual monastery, whose shape is still traced by the ground plan and the square inner courtyard. The late-Gothic Minoritenkirche on the south side still survives. The inner courtyard wall on the north side has been almost entirely glazed, acting as a "shop window" for the museum. A low, modest antechamber leads into the museum's very large entrance hall and central staircase.
he museum has a large collection (over 100,000 items) of European applied art from the 10th century to the present. This is arranged chronologically by era, and includes furniture, decorative carpets, small sculptures, dining utensils, luxury items, and decorative objects. For the sake of preservation, the textile collection is mostly displayed only in short-term special exhibitions.
The museum is particularly known for its collection of modern design. An exhibition of 20th century design, created by the Vitra Design Museum of Weil am Rhein in 2008, is spread across two floors of one of the wings. It features a thematic and chronological presentation of furniture, lamps, telephones, televisions, cameras, radios and household items, by designers including Ray Eames, Dieter Rams, Frank Lloyd Wright, Philippe Starck, Ettore Sottsass, and Joe Colombo. These are exhibited alongside visual artworks by artists including Wassily Kandinsky, Victor Vasarely, Jesús Rafael Soto, Piet Mondrian and Günther Uecker, in order to show the historical relationships between art and design.
Some individual exhibits include:
A Woman of the Apocalypse by Tilman Riemenschneider (1495)
A tapestry, Allegory of the Region of Africa (pre-1742)
A writing cabinet with chinoiserie, from the workshop of David Roentgen (1777–78)
Gerrit Rietveld: Rood-blauwe Stoel (1918)
Piet Mondrian: Composition III (1920)
Marcel Breuer: Liege (1936)
Ettore Sottsass for Memphis: Carlton, shelf (1981)
Naoto Fukasawa: CD-Player (1999)
The museum also hosts special temporary exhibitions.
Monday Closed
Tuesday 11:00 to 17:00
Wednesday 11:00 to 17:00
Thursday 11:00 to 17:00
Friday 11:00 to 17:00
Saturday 11:00 to 17:00
Sunday 11:00 to 17:00
The city of Cologne decided to found an applied art museum in 1888. The core of the exhibition originally came from the collections of Ferdinand Franz Wallraf (1748–1824) and Matthias Joseph de Noël (1782–1849), and the exhibition was soon expanded through endowments. The museum's original location was a Neo-Gothic building on the Hansaring, built in 1900, but this was destroyed by bombs in 1943.
he plain, red-brick Schwarz-Bernhard building stands on the site of a former Conventual monastery, whose shape is still traced by the ground plan and the square inner courtyard. The late-Gothic Minoritenkirche on the south side still survives. The inner courtyard wall on the north side has been almost entirely glazed, acting as a "shop window" for the museum. A low, modest antechamber leads into the museum's very large entrance hall and central staircase.
he museum has a large collection (over 100,000 items) of European applied art from the 10th century to the present. This is arranged chronologically by era, and includes furniture, decorative carpets, small sculptures, dining utensils, luxury items, and decorative objects. For the sake of preservation, the textile collection is mostly displayed only in short-term special exhibitions.
The museum is particularly known for its collection of modern design. An exhibition of 20th century design, created by the Vitra Design Museum of Weil am Rhein in 2008, is spread across two floors of one of the wings. It features a thematic and chronological presentation of furniture, lamps, telephones, televisions, cameras, radios and household items, by designers including Ray Eames, Dieter Rams, Frank Lloyd Wright, Philippe Starck, Ettore Sottsass, and Joe Colombo. These are exhibited alongside visual artworks by artists including Wassily Kandinsky, Victor Vasarely, Jesús Rafael Soto, Piet Mondrian and Günther Uecker, in order to show the historical relationships between art and design.
Some individual exhibits include:
A Woman of the Apocalypse by Tilman Riemenschneider (1495)
A tapestry, Allegory of the Region of Africa (pre-1742)
A writing cabinet with chinoiserie, from the workshop of David Roentgen (1777–78)
Gerrit Rietveld: Rood-blauwe Stoel (1918)
Piet Mondrian: Composition III (1920)
Marcel Breuer: Liege (1936)
Ettore Sottsass for Memphis: Carlton, shelf (1981)
Naoto Fukasawa: CD-Player (1999)
The museum also hosts special temporary exhibitions.
Monday Closed
Tuesday 11:00 to 17:00
Wednesday 11:00 to 17:00
Thursday 11:00 to 17:00
Friday 11:00 to 17:00
Saturday 11:00 to 17:00
Sunday 11:00 to 17:00
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Coordenadas GPS
Lat : 50.939903 - Lon : 6.954871
N50° 56' 23.6508 " E6° 57' 17.5356"
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