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Temporary exhibitions
Show department
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14.10.2025
22.03.2026
Architecture can be approached from many perspectives – through the analysis of its scientific and technical foundations, the craftsmanship of architects, builders and artisans, or according to style, function or purpose. The exhibition shows a cross-section of the richness of this art in 67 old prints and 16 maps and plans, published from the 16th to the 19th century.
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04.07.2025
The Stanisław Wyspiański Museum, a branch of the National Museum in Krakow, is located in the Old Granary, a building erected in the 18th century, which in the past has served as a granary, factory, shop, and headquarters of the Association of Polish Architects.
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25.04.2025
The “Gardens of Sculptors” project is an educational trail combining the pleasure of walking with gaining knowledge about women’s art. Visiting the gardens of our museum branches will allow you to become familiar with the work of female artists who have shaped the image of Polish sculpture from the end of the 19th century to the present day.
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13.02.2026
05.07.2026
The Group of Five exhibition is the first show in the history of museology dedicated to the activity of this Young Poland group, which existed for less than two and a half years (from August 1905 to February 1908). It also marks the first joint display of its members’ works since their activities at the beginning of the 20th century. This formation, almost entirely forgotten today, consisted of: Leopold Gottlieb, Witold Wojtkiewicz, Wlastimil Hofman, Mieczysław Jakimowicz, and Jan Rembowski.
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12.09.2025
01.03.2026
In the introduction to his groundbreaking work Radical Eye, Professor Andrzej Turowski identifies World War I as a key formative event in the history of modernism—an event that also “revealed separate areas of male and female experience”. This notion resonates with the exhibition Lviv Women, which, however, broadens the perspective beyond that of “crisis and destruction”, extending it to include the traumatic events associated with World War II—both those that preceded and followed it. These events were particularly dramatic and painful within the local context of Lviv, as well as in the lives of each of the Lviv-based women artists whose works are featured in the exhibition. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, ongoing since 2022, perpetuates, prolongs, and reactivates traumatic experiences that once seemed consigned to the past under the banner of “never again”.