2024. April 23. Tuesday
Kossuth Museum - Cegléd
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Address: 2700, Cegléd Múzeum utca 5.
Phone number: (53) 310-637, (30) 308-9983
E-mail: kossuthmuzeum@kossuthmuzeum.com
Opening hours: 15.03-31.10.: Tue-Sun 10-18
01.11-14.03.: Tue-Sun 9-17 |
The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2012.05.11. - 2012.07.08.
Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket for adults
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600 HUF
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Ticket for students
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300 HUF
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Ticket for pensioners
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300 HUF
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The memorial exhibition is to show the career covering many different artistic areas of Ágnes Remsey, in the context of the history of the Remsey family. Ágnes Remsey worked in various fields of art, such as applied art, literature, visual arts, and also puppet art. Our exhibition is the first that deals with all of them at the same time.
The first section is to contend with the carpet designer artist Ágnes Remsey through work at the Palotás Carpet Studio. In this section, the visitors will find several tapestries and carpets that students for the Gödöllő Applied Arts Studio made after the designs of Ágnes Remsey, overseen by the carpet artist Flóra Remsey.
The second section is to deal with the writer Ágnes Remsey, also showing her as an aquarelle artist.
The last section is to deal with the doll, and puppet maker Remsey family, including Ágnes. In addition to textile dolls made by Ágnes, we also reconstructed a marionette scene from an early play by the Remsey Marionette Theatre that was staged in 1947-1953.
Ágnes Remsey's nine-decade oeuvre enormously enriched Hungarian applied art. Her oeuvre was unbroken and coherent, the stages of which we see as significant documentary of the era she lived in.
Katalin Kopin, art historian, the curator of the exhibition
The first section is to contend with the carpet designer artist Ágnes Remsey through work at the Palotás Carpet Studio. In this section, the visitors will find several tapestries and carpets that students for the Gödöllő Applied Arts Studio made after the designs of Ágnes Remsey, overseen by the carpet artist Flóra Remsey.
The second section is to deal with the writer Ágnes Remsey, also showing her as an aquarelle artist.
The last section is to deal with the doll, and puppet maker Remsey family, including Ágnes. In addition to textile dolls made by Ágnes, we also reconstructed a marionette scene from an early play by the Remsey Marionette Theatre that was staged in 1947-1953.
Ágnes Remsey's nine-decade oeuvre enormously enriched Hungarian applied art. Her oeuvre was unbroken and coherent, the stages of which we see as significant documentary of the era she lived in.
Katalin Kopin, art historian, the curator of the exhibition