2025. July 8. Tuesday
Munkácsy Memorial House - Békéscsaba
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Address: 5600, Békéscsaba Gyulai út 5.
Phone number: (66) 442-080
E-mail: munkacsyhaz@mail.globonet.hu
Opening hours: 01.01-31.05.: Tue-Fri 9-16, Sat 10-16
01.06-01.10.: Tue-Sun: 10-18 01.10-30.11.: Tue-Fri 9-17, Sat-Sun 10-16 |
The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2008.11.20. - 2009.01.20.
Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket for adults
|
500 HUF
|
/ capita
|
Ticket for students
|
200 HUF
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/ capita
|
Ticket for pensioners
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200 HUF
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/ capita
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Tibor Házi (1946, September 18 - 1993, March 20), after his glass studies at the Hungarian Academy of Craft and Design under György Z. Gács, he worked in his own studio, producing illuminating bodies, glass-topped furniture pieces in the first place. In 1973 he designed several lamp sets for the Applied Arts Company's lamp factory.

He was a member of the Hungarian Art Fund, later MAOE (from 1971). He was a founding member of the Goszthonyi Mária International Glass Camp and Symposium Foundation at Bárdudvarnok. He was honoured with the Munkácsy Award in 1991. He is commemorated by the Házi Tibor Challenge Trophy founded in 1996 and awarded at Bárdudvarnok every year.
The new part of the exhibition series in the Mihály Munkácsy Memorial House representing Munkácsy Award winning industrial artists displays 19 of Tibor Házi's glassworks, 16 sketches and several photographs of him. The collection was kindly lent by his family and friends and the Goszthony Mária Endowment.

He was a member of the Hungarian Art Fund, later MAOE (from 1971). He was a founding member of the Goszthonyi Mária International Glass Camp and Symposium Foundation at Bárdudvarnok. He was honoured with the Munkácsy Award in 1991. He is commemorated by the Házi Tibor Challenge Trophy founded in 1996 and awarded at Bárdudvarnok every year.
The new part of the exhibition series in the Mihály Munkácsy Memorial House representing Munkácsy Award winning industrial artists displays 19 of Tibor Házi's glassworks, 16 sketches and several photographs of him. The collection was kindly lent by his family and friends and the Goszthony Mária Endowment.