Plečnik Collection

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Plečnikova zbirka
Karunova 4 and 6, SI-1000 Ljubljana
Phone386 (0) 1 280 1600






Plecnik Collection 2015 reception room Photo Matevz Paternoster.jpgPlečnik received guests in the small room panelled with wood on the ground floor. Renovated room in 2015

From 1972 until 2010 the Plečnik Collection represented an important department of the Museum of Architecture and Design. Now managed by the Museum and Galleries of Ljubljana), the collection is located at a separate location in the Plečnik House in Trnovo, where Jože Plečnik lived from 1921 until his death in 1957.

The collection consists of Plečnik's original work and furniture, his library, his drawing tools, and his personal belongings. The original artefacts of Jože Plečnik encompass a large archive of sketches, plans, photographs, and models made of wood, clay, and plaster, as well as Plečnik's correspondence and his student work. The main part of the collection is on display in the cylindrical annex of the house, constructed between 1923 and 1925 by the architect himself. The Plečnik House comprises a complex of two houses, and a garden with a lapidary, which all form a part of the Plečnik Collection as well.

The renovations of the Plečnik House and its surroundings lasted for two years, the Plečnik collection together with a permanent exhibition and a study centre is on view since September 2015.


Plecnik House 1926 Joze Plecnik.jpgJože Plečnik, standing in front of the cylindrical extension of his house in Trnovo, 1926. Photo by Museum and Galleries of Ljubljana documentation/Plečnik Collection.

Background

The Plečnik Collection department was established along with the Architecture Museum in 1972, to focus on the preservation of Plečnik's estate, yet it was opened to public in 1974, side by side with the Plečnik House.

The role of the department is to preserve the existent material as well as to acquire the new, to explore the period and circumstances in which the master lived and worked, and to educate, present and promote the work of Jože Plečnik.


Jože Plečnik

Jože Plečnik (1872–1957) left his hometown Ljubljana when he was 16 years old to study in Austrian Graz, later on he became a student of Otto Wagner in Vienna. He lived and worked in the cosmopolitan surroundings of Vienna and Prague, and after 33 years returned to Ljubljana with the intention of turning a provincial town into a capital of a nation. Few cities have had the personal seal of a single architect so strongly impressed upon them as Ljubljana has with Jože Plečnik.

Among Plečnik’s achievemens of neo-classical style were the Zacherl project in Vienna and the renovation of the Hradčani Castle for Masaryk, including a series of presidential apartments, the courtyards and the gardens.

The continued development of the architectural profession in Slovenia was ensured when the University of Ljubljana was established in 1919, and Jože Plečnik was invited to teach at the Department of Architecture from 1921. He considered traditional heritage not as a restriction, but rather as an inexhaustible source architecture, and his urban plan for Ljubljana (1929) gave him the opportunity to map out and implement his grand vision for the city. Over the course of two decades, with extremely limited financial resources, he married classical architectural forms with his own imaginative ideas to create a series of monumental new Buildings (the National and University Library, the Market Collonade, the Mutual Insurance Building, the Flat Iron Building Peglezen, the Žale Cemetary), bridges (Three Bridges, Shoemaker’s Bridge), and churches (Church of St Francis of Assisi, Church of St Michael in the Marsh).

Plečnik has also been praised abroad for his high degree of originality and innovation in the use of historical, regional and even local features. In January 2015 the Czech and Slovene Ministry of Culture nominated The timeless, humanistic architecture of Jože Plečnik in Ljubljana and Prague for the inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

See also


External links

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Plečnikova zbirka +
Plečnikova zbirka +
SI-1000 Ljubljana +
Karunova 4 and 6 +
Plecnik Collection 2015 reception room Photo Matevz Paternoster.jpgPlečnik received guests in the small room panelled with wood on the ground floor. +
Plečnik received guests in the small room panelled with wood on the ground floor. +
+386 / 1 280 1600 +
Ljubljana +
SI-1000 +
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