2025. September 26. Friday
Budapest History Museum - Budapest
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Address: 1014, Budapest Szent György tér 2.
Phone number: (1) 487-8800, (1) 487-8801
E-mail: btm@mail.btm.hu
Opening hours: Tue-Sun 10-18
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The exhibition has closed for visitors.
2009.07.23. - 2009.09.23.
Museum tickets, service costs:
Ticket for adults
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2000 HUF
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Ticket for students
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1000 HUF
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Group ticket for students
(over 10 people)
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500 HUF
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Ticket for pensioners
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1000 HUF
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Ticket for families
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2200 HUF
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/ family
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Group guide
(up to 20 people)
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7000 HUF
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Group guide
(20-30 people)
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9500 HUF
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Group guide
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14000 HUF
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Group guide
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18000 HUF
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Audio guide
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1200 HUF
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Photography
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1000 HUF
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The Castle Museum of the Budapest History Museum (Budapesti Történeti Múzeum Vármúzeuma) wellcomes the visitors with a new temporary exhibition of an important painter the hungarian art of the 20th century, Jenő Paizs Goebel (1896 - 1944). His oeuvre is shown by almost 200 paintings from Museums and privat collections. Some of this pictures has never ever been shown to the public.

Janő Paizs Goebel was born in Budapest. Until his death on 23 November 1944 he achieved great success both in Hungary and abroad. His peculiar, richly picturesque works abundant in symbols have been discovered by the profession as well as the public from time to time.
Jenő Paizs Gioebel was first Tivadar Zemplényi's then István Réti's pupil at the Academy of Fine Arts, between 1916 and 1924. His career started promisingly: having finished his studies at the academy he travelled to Paris on the Nemes Marcell Scholarship and on the honorarium of his landscape bought by the Museum of Fine Arts. He spent one and half years in the French capital and the nearby Barbizon until December 1925. After his return home in 1926 he worked at the Artists' Colony of Nagybánya (Transylvania, today in Rumania) for a short time. The artist's early works of the 1920s show the signs of Neoclassical school. In Paizs Goebel's works "the compositions built on light-shadow contrast emphasizing the plastic mass of bodies" were completed with expressive features partly recalling the constructivism of Cubism. One of the most important works of the period is the painter's picture titeld Saint Sebastian (Self-Portrait) from 1927, which was exhibited at the Hungarian exhibition in Rome in the following year, and now hier in the first part of this exhibition.
Jenő Paizs Goebel was one of the eight painters who established the Society of Szentendre Painters in January 1928. From this time on the artist worked mainly at the artists' colony of Szentendre as well as in his studio in Budapest. At the international fine arts exhibition of the World Expo of Barcelona in 1929 he won a silver medal.
It was in the first half of the 1930s that the painter's individual style characterized by decorative colours and symbols inspired by metaphysical impulses matured. The ars poetica-like summarizing works of the period ar Aranykor (Golden Age 1931), Art and Life. The early subjects - nude, landscape and self-portrait - transformed, and they often returned combined with each other in new forms. In this period besides the self-portrait referring back to the painterly role and combined with more and more abundant motif-system the other important subject of the oeuvre is the expressive jungle picture considered as tho projetion of an inner, spiritual landscape (In the Jungle, Civet-Cat, 1930), which can be related to henri Rousseau's jungle compositions. During the 1930s, apart from the works reflecting on the artist's identity and the jungle pictures significant art pieces were created by him in the genre of landscape as well (Trees in Blossom, 1931; Small Bridge of Szentendre, 1934)
In his last period Paizs Goebel represented mostly the landscape of Szentendre and the everyday life of the town. His sight-painting of lyrical mood offer an expressive compound of observed and known things. At the same time his works are more and more saturated with the irrepressible feeling of anguish rising everywhere. His art and his world concept can be paralelled with epochal trends in this respect as well. Through his work - which created an individual synthesis of progressive Europian trends - he became a significant character of Hungarian art between the two world wars.

Janő Paizs Goebel was born in Budapest. Until his death on 23 November 1944 he achieved great success both in Hungary and abroad. His peculiar, richly picturesque works abundant in symbols have been discovered by the profession as well as the public from time to time.
Jenő Paizs Gioebel was first Tivadar Zemplényi's then István Réti's pupil at the Academy of Fine Arts, between 1916 and 1924. His career started promisingly: having finished his studies at the academy he travelled to Paris on the Nemes Marcell Scholarship and on the honorarium of his landscape bought by the Museum of Fine Arts. He spent one and half years in the French capital and the nearby Barbizon until December 1925. After his return home in 1926 he worked at the Artists' Colony of Nagybánya (Transylvania, today in Rumania) for a short time. The artist's early works of the 1920s show the signs of Neoclassical school. In Paizs Goebel's works "the compositions built on light-shadow contrast emphasizing the plastic mass of bodies" were completed with expressive features partly recalling the constructivism of Cubism. One of the most important works of the period is the painter's picture titeld Saint Sebastian (Self-Portrait) from 1927, which was exhibited at the Hungarian exhibition in Rome in the following year, and now hier in the first part of this exhibition.
Jenő Paizs Goebel was one of the eight painters who established the Society of Szentendre Painters in January 1928. From this time on the artist worked mainly at the artists' colony of Szentendre as well as in his studio in Budapest. At the international fine arts exhibition of the World Expo of Barcelona in 1929 he won a silver medal.
It was in the first half of the 1930s that the painter's individual style characterized by decorative colours and symbols inspired by metaphysical impulses matured. The ars poetica-like summarizing works of the period ar Aranykor (Golden Age 1931), Art and Life. The early subjects - nude, landscape and self-portrait - transformed, and they often returned combined with each other in new forms. In this period besides the self-portrait referring back to the painterly role and combined with more and more abundant motif-system the other important subject of the oeuvre is the expressive jungle picture considered as tho projetion of an inner, spiritual landscape (In the Jungle, Civet-Cat, 1930), which can be related to henri Rousseau's jungle compositions. During the 1930s, apart from the works reflecting on the artist's identity and the jungle pictures significant art pieces were created by him in the genre of landscape as well (Trees in Blossom, 1931; Small Bridge of Szentendre, 1934)
In his last period Paizs Goebel represented mostly the landscape of Szentendre and the everyday life of the town. His sight-painting of lyrical mood offer an expressive compound of observed and known things. At the same time his works are more and more saturated with the irrepressible feeling of anguish rising everywhere. His art and his world concept can be paralelled with epochal trends in this respect as well. Through his work - which created an individual synthesis of progressive Europian trends - he became a significant character of Hungarian art between the two world wars.