Difference between revisions of "Krško Gallery"
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− | Set in a desacralised 18th century church, the [[Krško Gallery]] is a unique exhibition venue for various contemporary artistic endeavours in the field of visual arts. Established in [[established::1966 ]], it has been managed by the [[Krško Culture House]] since | + | Set in a desacralised 18th-century church, the [[Krško Gallery]] is a unique exhibition venue for various contemporary artistic endeavours in the field of visual arts. Established in [[established::1966 ]], it has been managed by the [[Krško Culture House]] since 2010. It has a blank white interior that consists solely of late-baroque architectural elements which strongly allude to their original devotional use. As such it both enables and also demands site-specific deployment of artworks. |
− | It has up to 6 exhibitions per year and is open to all sorts of artistic expressions – painting, photography, sculptures, multi-media installations and the like. The prime protagonists are mainly | + | It has up to 6 exhibitions per year and is open to all sorts of artistic expressions – painting, photography, sculptures, multi-media installations, and the like. The prime protagonists are mainly Slovene artists. |
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
− | The former | + | The former Church of the Holy Spirit was built on the ruins of a yet older church in the 1770s by the Auersperg noble family and was supposedly the work of the renowned architect of that time, Johann Fuchs. In the years leading to World War II, the church ceased with its ecclesiastical purposes and between 1939 and 1966 the Museum Society for the Political Districts of Brežice and Krško had a part of its collection displayed in it. |
− | In its first three decades, the gallery was led by the [[Valvasor Library, Krško]] which organised more than one hundred exhibitions. Later on, its custody was taken over by the local office of [[Public Fund for Cultural Activities of the Republic of Slovenia|JSKD]], and in 2010 given to the [[Krško Culture House]] (which also runs the [[Municipal Museum of Krško]] and the [[Rajhenburg Castle]]) | + | In its first three decades, the gallery was led by the [[Valvasor Library, Krško]] which organised more than one hundred exhibitions. Later on, its custody was taken over by the local office of the [[Public Fund for Cultural Activities of the Republic of Slovenia|Public Fund for Cultural Activities (JSKD)]], and in 2010 given to the [[Krško Culture House]] (which also runs the [[Municipal Museum of Krško]] and the [[Rajhenburg Castle]]). |
==Exhibitions== | ==Exhibitions== | ||
− | The gallery is now sometimes compared to the [[Božidar Jakac Gallery, Kostanjevica na Krki|Božidar Jakac Gallery]] in Kostanjevica na Krki, a renowned and also church stationed gallery for visual arts, quite similar in that most exhibitions are specially tailored for the venue. | + | The gallery is now sometimes compared to the [[Božidar Jakac Gallery, Kostanjevica na Krki|Božidar Jakac Gallery]] in Kostanjevica na Krki, a renowned and also church-stationed gallery for visual arts, quite similar in that most exhibitions are specially tailored for the venue. |
− | Some of the artists who presented their works here | + | Some of the artists who have presented their works here include the puppeteer [[Silvan Omerzu]], the photographers [[Uroš Abram]] and [[Borut Peterlin]], the conceptual artist [[Erik Mavrič]], the sculptor [[Boštjan Drinovec]], the painters [[Arjan Pregl]] and [[Zora Stančič]], and the collective [[Domestic Research Society]]. |
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 13:50, 21 November 2015
Background
The former Church of the Holy Spirit was built on the ruins of a yet older church in the 1770s by the Auersperg noble family and was supposedly the work of the renowned architect of that time, Johann Fuchs. In the years leading to World War II, the church ceased with its ecclesiastical purposes and between 1939 and 1966 the Museum Society for the Political Districts of Brežice and Krško had a part of its collection displayed in it.
In its first three decades, the gallery was led by the Valvasor Library, Krško which organised more than one hundred exhibitions. Later on, its custody was taken over by the local office of the Public Fund for Cultural Activities (JSKD), and in 2010 given to the Krško Culture House (which also runs the Municipal Museum of Krško and the Rajhenburg Castle).
Exhibitions
The gallery is now sometimes compared to the Božidar Jakac Gallery in Kostanjevica na Krki, a renowned and also church-stationed gallery for visual arts, quite similar in that most exhibitions are specially tailored for the venue.
Some of the artists who have presented their works here include the puppeteer Silvan Omerzu, the photographers Uroš Abram and Borut Peterlin, the conceptual artist Erik Mavrič, the sculptor Boštjan Drinovec, the painters Arjan Pregl and Zora Stančič, and the collective Domestic Research Society.
See also
- Krško Culture House
- Municipal Museum of Krško
- Rajhenburg Castle
- Božidar Jakac Gallery, Kostanjevica na Krki