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Accommodation near Museo del Prado Madrid

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Apartment Calle de la Colegiata 1 Madrid - Apt 41235

Apartment Calle de la Colegiata 1

Madrid → Embajadores, Downtown • 0.7 mi ( 1.2 km ) from Museo del Prado
more info
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Apartment Calle Ribera de Curtidores Madrid - Apt 29051

Apartment Calle Ribera de Curtidores

Madrid → Embajadores, Downtown • 1 mi ( 1.7 km ) from Museo del Prado
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Apartment Raimundo Fernandez Villaverde Madrid - Apt 41457

Apartment Raimundo Fernandez Villaverde

Madrid → Cuatro Caminos, Tetuán • 2.3 mi ( 3.7 km ) from Museo del Prado
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Museo del Prado (Museo Nacional del Prado)

The Museo del Prado is the main Spanish national art museum, located in central Madrid. It features one of the world's finest collections of European art, dating from the 12th century to the early 19th century, based on the former Spanish Royal Collection, and unquestionably the best single collection of Spanish art. Founded as a museum of paintings and sculpture in 1819, it also contains important collections of other types of works. El Prado is one of the most visited sites in the world, and is considered one the greatest museums of art in the world. The numerous works by Francisco de Goya, the single most extensively represented artist, as well as by Diego Velázquez, El Greco, Titian, Peter Paul Rubens and Hieronymus Bosch are some of the highlights of the collection.

The collection currently comprises around 7,600 paintings, 1,000 sculptures, 4,800 prints and 8,200 drawings, in addition to a large number of other works of art and historic documents. By 2012 the Museum will be displaying about 1,300 works in the main buildings, while around 3,100 works are on temporary loan to various museums and official institutions. The remainder are in storage. The museum received 2.8 million visitors in 2012.

The best-known work on display at the museum is Las Meninas by Velázquez. Velázquez not only provided the Prado with his own works, but his keen eye and sensibility were also responsible for bringing much of the museum's fine collection of Italian masters to Spain, now the largest outside of Italy.

Collections

History

The building that is now the home of the Museo Nacional del Prado was designed in 1785 by the architect Juan de Villanueva on the orders of Charles III to house the Natural History Cabinet. Nonetheless, the building's final function was not decided until the monarch's grandson, Ferdinand VII, encouraged by his wife, Queen María Isabel de Braganza, decided to use it as a new Royal Museum of Paintings and Sculptures. The Royal Museum, which would soon become known as the National Museum of Painting and Sculpture, and subsequently the Museo Nacional del Prado, opened to the public for the first time in November 1819. It was created with the double aim of showing the works of art belonging to the Spanish Crown and to demonstrate to the rest of Europe that Spanish art was of equal merit to any other national school.

The first catalogue of the Museum, published in 1819 and solely devoted to Spanish painting, included 311 paintings, although at that time the Museum housed 1,510 from the various royal residences, the Reales Sitios, including works from other schools. The exceptionally important royal collection, which forms the nucleus of the present-day Museo del Prado, started to increase significantly in the 16th century during the time of Charles V and continued under the succeeding Habsburg and Bourbon monarchs. Their efforts and determination led to the Royal Collection being enriched by some of the masterpieces now to be seen in the Prado. These include The Descent from the Cross by Rogier van der Weyden, The Garden of Earthly Delights by Hieronymous Bosch, Knight with his Hand on his Breast by El Greco, The Death of the Virgin by Mantegna, The Holy Family, known as "La Perla", by Raphael, Charles V at Mülhberg by Titian, Christ Washing the Disciples’ Feet by Tintoretto, Dürer's Self-portrait, Las Meninas by Velázquez, The Three Graces by Rubens, and The Family of Charles IV by Goya.

In addition to works from the Spanish royal collection, other holdings increased and enriched the Museum with further masterpieces, such as the two Majas by Goya. Among the now closed museums whose collections have been added to that of the Prado were the Museo del la Trinidad in 1872, and the Museo de Arte Moderno in 1971. In addition, numerous legacies, donations and purchases have been of crucial importance for the growth of the collection. Various works entered the Prado from the Museo de la Trinidad, including The Fountain of Grace by the School of Van Eyck, the Santo Domingo and San Pedro Martír altarpieces painted for the monastery of Santo Tomás in Ávila by Pedro Berruguete, and the five canvases by El Greco executed for the Colegio de doña María de Aragón. Most of the Museum's 19th-century paintings come from the former Museo de Arte Moderno, including works by the Madrazos, José de Madrazo y Agudo and Federico de Madrazo, Vicente López, Carlos de Haes, Eduardo Rosales and Sorolla.

Upon the deposition of Isabella II in 1868, the museum was nationalized and acquired the new name of "Museo del Prado". The building housed the royal collection of arts, and it rapidly proved too small. The first enlargement to the museum took place in 1918. Since the creation of the Museo del Prado more than 2,300 paintings have been incorporated into its collection, as well as a large number of sculptures, prints, drawings and works of art through bequests, donations and purchases, which account for most of the New Acquisitions. Numerous bequests have enriched the Museum's holdings, such as the outstanding collection of medals left to the Museum by Pablo Bosch; the drawings and items of decorative art left by Pedro Fernández Durán as well as Van der Weyden's masterpiece, The Virgin and Child; and the Ramón de Errazu bequest of 19th-century paintings. Particularly important donations include Barón Emile d'Erlanger's gift of Goya's Black Paintings in 1881. Among the numerous works that have entered the collection through purchase are some outstanding ones acquired in recent years including two works by El Greco, The Fable and The Flight into Egypt acquired in 1993 and 2001, Goya's Countess of Chinchón bought in 2000, and Velázquez's portrait of The Pope's Barber, acquired in 2003.

Between 1873 and 1900, the Prado helped decorate city halls, new universities, and churches. During the Second Spanish Republic from 1931 to 1936, the focus was on building up provincial museums. During the Spanish Civil War, upon the recommendation of the League of Nations, the museum staff removed 353 paintings, 168 drawings and the Dauphin's Treasure and sent the art to Valencia, then later to Girona, and finally to Geneva. The art had to be returned across French territory in night trains to the museum upon the commencement of World War II. During the early years of the dictatorship of Francisco Franco, many paintings were sent to embassies.

The main building was enlarged with short pavilions in the rear between 1900 and 1960. The next enlargement was the incorporation of two buildings (nearby but not adjacent) into the institutional structure of the museum: the Casón del Buen Retiro, which is equipped to display up to 400 paintings and which housed the bulk of the 20th-century art from 1971 to 1997, and the Salón de Reinos (Throne building), formerly the Army Museum.

In 1993, an extension proposed by the Prado's director at the time, Felipe Garin, was quickly abandoned after a wave of criticism. In the late 1990s, a $14 million roof work forced the Velázquez masterpiece Las Meninas to change galleries twice. In 1998, the Prado annex in the nearby Casón del Buen Retiro closed for a $10 million two-year overhaul that included three new underground levels. In 2007, the museum finally executed Rafael Moneo's project to expand its exposition room to 16,000 square meters, hoping to increase the yearly number of visitors from 1.8 million to 2.5 million.

t:source: http://cs.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museo_del_Prado

Landmarks near Museo del Prado

  • Paseo del Prado
    110 yd ( 100 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Plaça Santa Ana
    710 yd ( 650 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Puerta de Alcalá
    770 yd ( 700 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Atocha Train Station
    840 yd ( 770 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Retiro Park
    920 yd ( 840 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Puerta del Sol Madrid
    980 yd ( 890 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Chueca
    0.6 mi ( 960 m ) from Museo del Prado
  • Fnac
    0.7 mi ( 1 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Gran Via Station
    0.7 mi ( 1.1 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Plaza Mayor Madrid
    0.7 mi ( 1.2 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Callao
    0.8 mi ( 1.2 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Serrano
    0.8 mi ( 1.3 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station La Latina
    0.9 mi ( 1.4 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Embajadores
    0.9 mi ( 1.4 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Velázquez
    0.9 mi ( 1.4 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Santo Domingo
    0.9 mi ( 1.5 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Acacias
    1 mi ( 1.7 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Metro station Delicias
    1 mi ( 1.7 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Gate of Toledo
    1.1 mi ( 1.8 km ) from Museo del Prado
  • Calle Princesa
    1.2 mi ( 2.0 km ) from Museo del Prado

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