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  • Nationalmuseum’s summer exhibition at Gustavsberg Porcelain Museum celebrates the art of Wilhelm Kåge

    In 1917 the Gustavsberg porcelain works hired Wilhelm Kåge, a commercial artist. That same year the manufacturer introduced a “dinner service for the working class”. Nationalmuseum’s summer exhibition at the Gustavsberg Porcelain Museum is marking the centenary with a comprehensive presentation of Kåge’s diverse art. 
    The exhibition features examples of Kåge’s work ranging from everyday china t

  • Göran Persson is this year’s Portrait of Honour

    On Saturday 3 June, the 2017 Portrait of Honour will be unveiled at Gripsholm Castle. The subject this year is Göran Persson, the Social Democrat politician and former prime minister. The portrait is the work of Olle Hamngren, who has created a dignified painting in an illusionistic style with many levels.

  • New acquisition: North necklace by Hanna Hedman

    Nationalmuseum has acquired a necklace created in 2015 by Hanna Hedman (born 1980). North is made from reindeer hide, sheepskin, and reindeer, moose and deer antler. The materials reflect the artist’s Norrbotten connections. Hanna Hedman is also featured in Nationalmuseum’s Transformations exhibition, which opens soon in Venice.

  • Nationalmuseum to exhibit Swedish art jewellery in Venice

    The exhibition "Transformations - Six Artists from Sweden" will open on Thursday 11 May at the Museo Palazzo Mocenigo, a Renaissance palace in the center of Venice. The six jewellery artists Tobias Alm, Sara Borgegård Älgå, Hanna Hedman, Catarina Hällzon, Agnes Larsson and Märta Mattsson, will contribute a total of 57 works to this exhibition which will coincide with the 2017 Venice Biennale.

  • Nationalmuseum presents a new aspect of Dawid’s art at Gripsholm this summer

    Men, an exhibition of 49 photographic portraits by Dawid, opens at Gripsholm Castle on 20 May 2017. Most of the portraits are being exhibited for the first time. Dawid is not known for his portraits. Now, with the first full-scale exhibition of these works, visitors have the opportunity to discover a previously unknown aspect of his art.

  • Nationalmuseum Design in Stockholm bows out with Hundred years of Finnish design

    The burgeoning of design and fine craft in Finland from 1900 to the present day will be the theme of the closing exhibition at Nationalmuseum Design, Nationalmuseum’s temporary space for design-related exhibitions in Stockholm. The exhibition Hundred Years of Finnish Design - From the Rafaela & Kaj Forsblom Collection opens June 20.

  • New acquisition: Onkel Adam armchair by Kerstin Hörlin-Holmquist

    Nationalmuseum has acquired an Onkel Adam armchair, a classic design by Kerstin Hörlin-Holmquist, who made her name as a furniture and textile designer for Nordiska Kompaniet and other brands in the 1950s and 60s. Nationalmuseum did not acquire any of her works until 2000, but now another of her more significant creations has joined the museum’s collection.

  • New Acquisition: A Botanical Study by Herman Saftleven

    Nationalmuseum has acquired a botanical watercolour study by Herman Saftleven from 1683. It depicts a sticky nightshade and was made on commission for Agnes Block, a passionate collector of exotic flora. Only 27 of Saftleven’s botanical studies are known today.

  • Exhibition about Eero Aarnio opens 8 February

    ​February 8, during Stockholm Design Week, the exhibition by and about Finnish interior designer Eero Aarnio opens at Nationalmuseum Design. Aarnio is one of the best-known figures internationally in the history of modern Finnish design with experimental designs and futuristic reinforced plastic chairs. A press preview will be held on 8 February at 10 am.

  • ​Treasures from the Nationalmuseum of Sweden at The Morgan Library & Museum

    Nationalmuseum and The Morgan Library & Museum collaborates in the exhibition Treasures from Nationalmuseum of Sweden opening February 3. More than 75 masterpieces from the collection of Swedish count Carl Gustaf Tessin, now owned by Nationalmuseum, are brought to New York for a rare visit. The show includes works by artists such as Dürer, Raphael, Rubens, Rembrandt, Watteau and Boucher.

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