2026. April 30. Thursday
Budapest Museum of Fine Arts - Budapest
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Address: 1146, Budapest Dózsa György út 41.
Phone number: (1) 469-7100
E-mail: info@szepmuveszeti.hu
Opening hours: Tue-Sun 10:00-18:00
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The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2009.10.28. - 2010.02.14.
Museum tickets, service costs:
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Ticket for adults
(valid for the permanent exhibitions)
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2800 HUF
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/ capita
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Ticket for adults
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3200 HUF
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Group ticket for adults
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2900 HUF
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Ticket for students
(valid for the permanent exhibitions)
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1400 HUF
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/ capita
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Ticket for students
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1600 HUF
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Group ticket for students
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1400 HUF
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Ticket for pensioners
(valid for the permanent exhibitions)
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1400 HUF
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/ capita
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Audio guide
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800 HUF
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Video
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1000 HUF
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The most comprehensive exhibition to date dedicated to the Italian Renaissance will run in the Museum of Fine Arts from 28 October. The large-scale exhibition entitled Botticelli to Titian. Masterpieces of Two Centuries of Italian Painting will display paintings on loan to the Museum of Fine Arts from over fifty museums, including the Uffizi in Florence, the Louvre in Paris, the national galleries of London and Washington, the Metropolitan Museum in New York, the Galleria Borghese in Rome and the Prado in Madrid. In addition to works by Botticelli and Titian, the 130 paintings on show represent the art of over eighty masters, among whom are Leonardo, Giorgione, Raphael, Veronese and Tintoretto.

The exhibit of 15th-16th-century Italian painting offers visitors the opportunity to familiarise themselves with masterpieces by the greatest artists of the period and explore the emergence and development of intellectual and artistic processes in the most important cultural centres. For the very first time in Hungary the Italian Renaissance will be presented in a spectacular, large-scale exhibition with a sound scholarly foundation. The works on loan will be supplemented by thirty-five paintings from the Museum of Fine Arts' own prestigious Italian collection.
The Budapest exhibition will display works that are a sensation in themselves: Titian's Man with a Glove, Bartolomeo Veneto's Flora, Botticelli’s Story of Virginia, Cossa's Portrait of a Man, Perugino's Portrait of Francesco delle Opere, Savoldo's Tobias and the Angel and Palma Vecchio's La Bella are all outstanding pieces of the period. The Hungarian public will also have the opportunity to see one of the most famous and valuable paintings in the world, the emblematic Lady with an Ermine by Leonardo da Vinci, which is permanently exhibited in the Czartoryski Museum in Cracow and has so far in Europe only been loaned to Italian museums.

The exhibit of 15th-16th-century Italian painting offers visitors the opportunity to familiarise themselves with masterpieces by the greatest artists of the period and explore the emergence and development of intellectual and artistic processes in the most important cultural centres. For the very first time in Hungary the Italian Renaissance will be presented in a spectacular, large-scale exhibition with a sound scholarly foundation. The works on loan will be supplemented by thirty-five paintings from the Museum of Fine Arts' own prestigious Italian collection.
The Budapest exhibition will display works that are a sensation in themselves: Titian's Man with a Glove, Bartolomeo Veneto's Flora, Botticelli’s Story of Virginia, Cossa's Portrait of a Man, Perugino's Portrait of Francesco delle Opere, Savoldo's Tobias and the Angel and Palma Vecchio's La Bella are all outstanding pieces of the period. The Hungarian public will also have the opportunity to see one of the most famous and valuable paintings in the world, the emblematic Lady with an Ermine by Leonardo da Vinci, which is permanently exhibited in the Czartoryski Museum in Cracow and has so far in Europe only been loaned to Italian museums.

