"Liedtke Museum brings together the work of Dieter W. Liedtke. Beginning with a quick review of art history innovations, the links between art and science, the new genetical and informational processes and a possible vision about the future of the world. In addition, it has a private art gallery and a museum shop, where you can acquire Liedtke's books. The building, designed by the artist, represents a huge human brain sculpture. The entrance is totally free and it also has apartments with sea views and a café-restaurant with live music in which take place different weekly events."
ABA Art is located across from the Es Baluard Museum. The history of ABA dates back to the Camba Art Gallery, which was opened in 1997 in the La Lonja neighbourhood of Palma de Mallorca, with the goal of serving as a platform for disseminating contemporary art. When this gallery closed, the new ABA venue was opened in September 2004, conceived as a continuation of the efforts from the previous years at the Camba Art Gallery.
It is located in an old Majorcan manor house of the Gelabert de la Portella family. The only architectural element that has endured over time is an impressive Gothic pointed arch, as the current house is the result of transformations and extensions carried out between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries. It serves as an exhibition hall, with works by local and national artists, as well as a stage for theater performances, film screenings and music concerts.
The Casal Son Tugores is located in the municipality of Alaró and acts as a multifunctional hall where we can find art galleries, conference rooms and the municipal library of Alaró.
The La Tafona gallery is part of the cultural activities at the Hotel La Residencia in Deià, which is pleased to make its services available to all guests.
The gallery was opened in November 2007 with an exhibition by artist Pascual de Cabo. It is located in an old Mallorcan house, and the exhibition area extends from the main room on the ground floor to the vaulted basement which can be reached via a staircase.
The museum is the same house where the artist lived half his life, where he carried out some of his most important work as a painter. The building houses a large part of Dionís Bennàssar’s artistic legacy, as well as many of his personal objects, furniture, etc. In this 17th century house, visitors can view the Foundation’s art patrimony, comprising several collections: Oils on canvas, watercolours, drawing, sculpture, etc. The museum also houses the Fundación Dionís Bennàssar offices.
Residence of the Bishop of Mallorca, it is Gothic in style. The Museum displays some of the treasures of the Mallorcan Church. It is divided into seven sections - rreligious sculpture, archaeology, modern ceramics, the Séguier legacy, religious art and numismatics, Gothic painting and a bibliographical collection. The museum's director, Miquel Garau, affirms that the museum hopes to offer a educational tour of the history of the Church in Mallorca that provides people the chance to perceive the beauty of Church art. The Diocesan Museum has a remarkably varied and extensive collection of cultural heritage, which made it hard to select the works for the permanent exhibition and is why a hall for temporary exhibitions was created to gradually display the part of the collection not in the permanent exhibition and pieces that are being recovered at present. The museum debuts with a permanent exhibition of 200 pieces that trace the islanl's ecclesiastical art from the fifteenth century to our times. One of the collection's most outstanding works is Pere Niçarl's Sant Jordi, a fundamental fifteenth-century piece in Mallorca with clear Flemish influences that offers a glimpse of life in the port of Palma at that time. Work by Valencian Renaissance painter Joan de Joanes, with its Roman, classical and monumental influences, also has a special place in the museum.
Located in a privileged enclave on a hill overlooking the sea and formed by an important collection that includes more than 6,000 pieces, the Pilar and Joan Miró Foundation of Mallorca is one of the most important contemporary art spaces in the world. When he got to know Mallorca, Joan Miró fell in love with the island. It was in 1956 when he decided to settle there, and he would remain there until his death. Following in detail the will of the artist, who wanted everything to remain intact when he was no longer present, in the museum you can visit the old workshops where he worked. In the modern main building, different works by Miró are displayed in the cozy atmosphere of the peculiar construction, where the sun shines through the windows strategically designed to create pleasant rooms. The back of the Miró Foundation building is enveloped by a pleasant garden decorated with sculptures that blend perfectly with nature to form an inspiring ensemble capable of awakening the senses.
Baroque building dating from 1763, also known as Can Morell. It was acquired by the Palma City Council in 1975 and is used for temporary art exhibitions and cultural events.
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