Sorolla Museum
The Sorolla Museum (Spanish: Museo Sorolla) is a single-artist museum in Madrid, Spain, devoted to the work and life of Joaquín Sorolla and the members of his family, such as his daughter Elena.[1] The museum is located in the house that was the artist's home and workshop, which was converted into a museum after the death of his widow. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1962.[citation needed] It is one of the National Museums of Spain and it is attached to the Ministry of Culture.
The building was designed by Enrique María Repullés. The principal rooms continue to be furnished as they were during the artist's life, including Sorolla's large, well-lit studio, where the walls are filled with his canvasses. Other rooms are used as galleries to display Sorolla's paintings, while the upstairs rooms are a gallery for temporary exhibitions. In 2014, these rooms presented an exhibition of David Palacin photographs of the ballet Sorolla produced by the Spanish National Dance Company.[2]
Selected collection highlights
- Capturing the moment
- Strolling along the Seashore
- Types and Bride of Lagartera
See also
References
External links
- Official website
- Overview of temporary exhibitions held at the Sorolla Museum (in Spanish)
- Sorolla Museum within Google Arts & Culture
- Listing for the Museo Sorolla at the Artist's Studio Museum Network
- Vayamadrid.com: The-intimate-museo-sorolla
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- Harbour (1881)
- Contadina de Asís (1888)
- Clotilde García del Castillo (1890)
- Portrait of Benito Pérez Galdós (1894)
- Return From Fishing (1894)
- Joaquín Sorolla García Dressed in White (1896)
- Sad Inheritance (1899)
- Señora de Sorolla in Black (1906)
- Maria at La Granja (1907)
- Walk on the Beach (1909)
- Miss Mary Lillian Duke (1911)
- Vision of Spain (1913-19)
- Sorolla Museum
- Hispanic Society of America (Sorolla Room)
- Elena Sorolla (daughter)
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