Event calendar
2024. April
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2024.04.20. - 2024.11.24.
Budapest
2023.12.15. - 2024.02.18.
Budapest
2023.11.16. - 2024.01.21.
Budapest
2023.11.09. - 2024.03.17.
Budapest
2023.10.27. - 2024.02.11.
Budapest
2023.10.18. - 2024.02.18.
Budapest
2023.09.22. - 2024.01.21.
Budapest
2012.03.01. - 2012.03.31.
Vác
2012.02.01. - 2012.02.29.
Miskolc
2012.01.22. - 1970.01.01.
Budapest
2011.10.04. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.10.01. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.10.01. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.09.30. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.09.30. - 1970.01.01.
Nagykáta
2011.07.04. - 2011.07.08.
Budapest
Kunsthalle - Budapest
The gallery
Address: 1146, Budapest Dózsa György út 37.
Phone number: (1) 460-7000, (1) 363-2671
Opening hours: Tue-Wed 10-18, Thu 12-20, Fri-Sun 10-18
The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2015.11.30. - 2016.02.29.
fine art, temporary exhibition
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Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket for adults
1200 HUF
Ticket for adults
(valid for the Kunsthalle and the Ernst Museum)
1400 HUF
Group ticket for adults
(from over 10 people)
800 HUF
/ capita
Ticket for students
(EU citizens from the age of 6 to 26 )
600 HUF
Ticket for students
(valid for the Kunsthalle and the Ernst Museum, 6-26 years of age)
700 HUF
Group ticket for students
(from over 10 people)
400 HUF
/ capita
Ticket for pensioners
(valid for the Kunsthalle and the Ernst Museum, 62-70 years of age)
700 HUF
Ticket for pensioners
(EU citizens from the age of 62 to 70)
600 HUF
Ticket for families
(1 adults + 2 children)
1800 HUF
/ family
Ticket for families
(2 adults + 2 children)
2400 HUF
/ family
Hungarian novelist Mór Jókai in his Novel of the Next Century builds a utopian world around the discovery of a new material, the ichor, endowed with limitless possibilities. The hero of the novel makes a fantastic glass and all kinds of mechanical equipment out of this material. Today’s scientific discoveries have long ceased to be such unique events. They come about through the concerted efforts of scientific teams that build on the results of other teams. Art, on the other hand, remained in touch with the ancient cathartic experience of discovery and invention.

Four new exhibitions will open in the Műcsarnok this autumn under the collective title „Eureka!”

The oeuvre of Nicolas Schöffer, the magician of light, intimating the Future with a capital F, is discovery itself. His famous cyber-sculptures are radiotowers that both emit and receive signals. We celebrate his light-art in the international year of light but there is more to Schöffer than light: theatre and stage dance, urban and architectural planning was also on his inventive palette.

The scheme of art collector Ákos Vörösváry is discovery in two ways. First, he discovers hidden treasures and, second, as an exhibition curator discovers hidden connections between different works of art. He finds an adequate place for the withering objects of folk art among the artifacts of higher culture through his poetico-spatial visions.

Both as a sculptor and as a creator of a uniquely original theatre which mobilizes forgotten ancient values, István Malgot was searching for and discovered the magic of Pygmalion in plastic art. Rarely has there been a Hungarian artist to produce such an evenly and equally high quality work in many different fields as the exceptional István Malgot.

Lajos Csertő dreamed up technical novelties and new ecological systems. In his person the callings of a visionary are combined with the practicalities of moulding and executing sculptures. His water management megaproject is a gigantic vision of land art.

According to the Swiss architect-sculptor, Peter Zumthor, designing a work of art is always a discovery. The collective exhibition entitled „Eureka!” in the Műcsarnok charts the multifaceted senses of discovery, of utopia and of miracle through four exhibitions that present four exceptional artists and four outstanding approaches to reality and to its limits, to knowledge and to how one can overstep the impossible.