Búsqueda de museos y pinturas

Renania del Norte-Westfalia / Alemania

Renania del Norte-Westfalia o Renania septentrional-Westfalia es uno de los 16 estados federados de Alemania. Renania del Norte-Westfalia posee en la actualidad cerca de 18 millones de habitantes, con los que contribuye aproximadamente al 22 % del producto interior bruto de Alemania y se extiende sobre un área de 34 083 km². Renania del Norte-Westfalia se sitúa en la parte más occidental de Alemania y comparte fronteras con Bélgica y los Países Bajos, e internamente limita con los estados federados de Baja Sajonia al norte, Renania-Palatinado al sur y Hesse al sureste. La capital del estado es Düsseldorf, y otras ciudades muy pobladas e importantes son Mönchengladbach, Colonia, Leverkusen, Dortmund, Duisburgo, Bonn, Bochum, Münster, Aquisgrán o Gelsenkirchen.

Museum Ostwall

Renania del Norte-Westfalia / Alemania

The Museum Ostwall is a museum of modern and contemporary art in Dortmund, Germany. It was founded in the late 1940s, and has been located in the Dortmund U-Tower since 2010. The collection includes paintings, sculptures, objects and photographs from the 20th century, plus over 2,500 graphics, spanning Expressionism through classic modern art to the present day.

Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte

Renania del Norte-Westfalia / Alemania

The Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte or MKK is a municipal museum in Dortmund, Germany. It is currently located in an Art Deco building which was formerly the Dortmund Savings Bank. The collection includes paintings, sculptures, furniture and applied art, illustrating the cultural history of Dortmund from early times to the 20th century. There are regular temporary exhibitions of art and culture, as well as a permanent exhibition on the history of surveying, with rare geodetic instruments.

Propsteikirche, Dortmund

Renania del Norte-Westfalia / Alemania

Propsteikirche is the common name of a church in Dortmund, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, the only Catholic church in the city centre. The full name is Propsteikirche St. Johannes Baptist Dortmund. It was built from 1331 as the abbey church of a Dominican monastery. Consecrated in 1458, it features a late-Gothic high altar by Derick Baegert which shows the oldest depiction of Dortmund. The church became the first Catholic church in Dortmund after the Reformation, a Propsteikirche from 1859. Destroyed in World War II, it was rebuilt until 1966. Its organ, built in 1988, makes it a concert venue.