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Textiles Study Collection

Curator: Barbara Karl
Since 1993, the Textiles Study Collection has been mounting temporary exhibitions showing various parts of the collection in order to present the wide diversity of the MAK’s textile holdings.
The MAK is home to an unusually rich and diverse collection of textiles and carpets from Europe and numerous regions of Asia, Africa, and the Americas: these range from artifacts of late antiquity excavated from Egyptian graves (accessible as part of the MAK Collection online to medieval tapestries, embroideries, and paraments, and from world-famous Ottoman and Safavid carpets from the 16th and 17th centuries to textiles produced by the Wiener Werkstätte and contemporary fashion.

Up to the Industrial Revolution, textiles—those fragile witnesses to the past—were the most important commodities worldwide after precious metals and foodstuffs. Even today, they remain important objects of international trade. Along with textiles from far away, Europe saw the arrival of valuable dyes and complex techniques as well as shapes which came to play a role in European ornamentation. By means of early industrial espionage, Europe gained knowledge concerning both the cultivation of raw materials and the complex methods by which they were processed. Great conquerors often brought weavers and embroiderers home as booty: Roger II of Sicily, for example, kidnapped them in the eastern Mediterranean; Timur abducted them to Samarkand, and Afonso de Albuquerque spirited them off from India to Lisbon.

Since textiles should only be exhibited on a temporary basis due to their fragility, each year the Study Collection presents a different excerpt from the collection. Such presentations seek to be definitive with regard to the textiles’ art-historical status, the techniques used to produce and decorate with them, and the cultural and historical contexts within which they were created and used. Past years have included exhibitions on such diverse themes as Kashmir shawls, ecclesiastical paraments, an ensemble of beds from the household of Prince Eugene, and various types of fans; the vast majority of the items shown were drawn from the museum’s own collection. Several exhibitions have been accompanied by major publications, such as Fragile Remnants, which presents the so-called Coptic textiles from late antiquity excavated from Egyptian graves and purchased early on in the museum’s history (Völker, Angela: Verletzliche Beute, MAK Studies 5, MAK Vienna / Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern-Ruit, 2005). The exhibition Lace and so on…, featuring the lace collection of Berta Pappenheim was likewise documented in book-form (Völker, Angela: Spitzen und so weiter…, MAK Studies 11, MAK Vienna / Schlebrügge.editor, Vienna, 2007).

Exhibition projects involving several areas of the collection such as the recent showings THE EMPEROR’S NEW COLORS. 19th-Century Chinese Art and 2 x JAPAN in 2008, as well as exhibitions featuring contemporary fashion designers such as STEPHAN HANN Recycling-Couture, round out the presentations of the Textiles Study Collection.

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Permanent Collection

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Permanent Collection Renaissance Baroque Rococo

Artistic intervention: Franz Graf
The joint arrangement of precious glasses with valuable needle and bobbin lace in the MAK Renaissance Baroque Rococo Collection on permanent display not only complies with aspects of art history, but also places these delicate materials in a visual-sensuous dialogue with each other that enhances and accentuates their aesthetic effect with striking clarity.
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Freier Artikel

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MAK Collection Online

The MAK¹s comprehensive holdings of applied and contemporary art
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Permanent Collection

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Permanent Collection Romanesque Gothic Renaissance

Artistic intervention: Günther Förg
The MAK Romanesque Gothic Renaissance Collection on permanent display reflects the often long-term survival of stylistic characteristics in the decorative arts. A special highlight here is the most ancient set of medieval liturgical vestments to have been preserved in its entirety.
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Random

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Metal Collection

Curator: Elisabeth Schmuttermeier
The holdings of the Metal Collection comprises objects from Europe and North America, dating from the fourteenth century to the present. From the very beginning, there existed a policy of acquiring contemporary works for the collection as well as historical objects. The collection covers diverse areas of the applied arts including small-scale sculpture, cutlery, clocks, jewellery, goldsmith’s art, lamps, astronomy devices and electro-plated reproductions.
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New Look #4

Verena Dengler

Wed, 19.06.2013–Sun, 06.10.2013

MAK-Gallery

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Cooperation University of Applied Arts, Vienna

Exhibition series APPLIED ARTS. NOW
The exhibition series APPLIED ARTS. NOW is intended to serve as a platform for contemporary forms of applied art and thus provide greater visibility for particularly interesting artistic stances originated by graduates of the University of Applied Arts who live and work on a freelance basis in Austria.
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Furniture and Woodwork Collection

Curator: Sebastian Hackenschmidt
The MAK is home to an extensive collection of furniture and woodwork, in light of which the artistic and stylistic tendencies of furniture history—with a focus on Austria and Vienna—can be understood along with the cultural-historical and political developments of the past nearly 150 years. The collection encompasses over 4,600 objects ranging from small carvings and ornamental boxes to massive cabinets and whole room interiors.
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