Maribor Art Gallery

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Umetnostna galerija Maribor (UGM)
Strossmayerjeva 6, SI-2000 Maribor
Phone386 (0) 2 229 5860, 386 (0) 2 250 2543
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Established in 1954 within a 16th-century Celestine monastery building, Maribor Art Gallery started to develop its permanent collection in 1961, and subsequently acquired an additional space in Maribor Town Hall at Glavni trg (Rotovž I Exhibition Salon). In 1985 the Gallery acquired a further space at Trg Borisa Kraigherja (Rotovž II Exhibition Salon), which now functions as an exhibition hall for modern art. Today its collection consists of some 3,000 paintings, sculptures and works on paper, comprising mainly works acquired through a systematic purchase policy, plus donations and legacies and also a small number of works of art transferred from Maribor Regional Museum.


The collection of Slovene graphic art is of high quality, as is the collection of art works from the post-war period to the 1960s and 1970s, when the visual arts flourished in Maribor and reached one of their peaks in works by Rudolf Kotnik and Slavko Tihec. This latter section presents paintings by Lajči Pandur, Jan Oeltjen and Maks Kavčič, and sculptures by Gabrijel Kolbič, Stojan Batič and Vlasta Zorko. The collection also includes paintings by members of the first generation of artists who graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Ljubljana and worked in Maribor (Oton Polak, Slavko Kores, Milan Vojsk and Janez Šibila). The following section presents the now middle-aged generation of Slovene painters. The 1970s are marked by Pop-art, New Realism and Conceptualism (Bogdan Čobal, Lojze Logar), with a focus on Zmago Jeraj, the central figure of the period. Work by painters from Prekmurje (France Mesarič, Zdenko Huzjan) and a presentation of the 'young' generation (Mirko Bratuša, Sandi Červek, Darko Golija, Oto Rimele, Andrej Brumen Čop) concludes the presentation of the collection.

In 1999 the gallery began its collection of Slovene video art known as the 'UGM Video Collection'.

See also Forma Viva Open Air Sculpture Collection, Maribor.

Satchmo Jazz Club, Maribor is located in the Gallery's cellar.

See also