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Museum+ Raffaello

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Museum+ Raffaello

Special / Evening programs
Museum of Fine Arts
September 10, 2020

18:00 - 22:00

TAPAS AND WINE VARIATIONS from the Fine Art Bistro
You do not need to leave the ’temple of art’ just because you feel hungry or thirsty. Take a break between two events and activate your senses of taste and smell to make your nocturnal museum exploration even more memorable: treat yourself to our fine tapas selection and the perfect accompaniment of exquisite wines, while letting the old music ensemble Custos Consor fly you to Renaissance Italy.

CONCERT OF THE OLD MUSIC ENSEMBLE CUSTOS CONSORT
With a defining presence in the early music scene in Hungary, the Custos Consort strives to create an authentic sound, while satisfying contemporary needs. The lesser known instruments they play at their concerts, such as the viola da gamba, the blockflöte, the medieval harp and lutes add a great many colours to their music.
Their repertoire extends from the early Renaissance through the Baroque to the classical compositions for baritone and chamber orchestra.
Their concerts and recordings have been praised by numerous critics; they won the Grand Prize at the Chamber Orchestra Festival in Kőszeg in 2009.
The members of the ensemble have made numerous CD recordings with Hungaroton and other record publishing companies. Apart from Hungary, they have been performing in concert halls of the Czech Republic, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Croatia and India.
Sándor Szászvárosi, a viola da gamba player, is the arts director of Custos Consort.
A representative of the historical performing style, his main focus is to present the varied musical styles of the 15th to 18th centuries to the public. Besides being the gamba soloist of Hungaroton Records and playing in concerts regularly across Europe, he is the founder of several early music ensembles (including the Sonora Hungarica Consort, the Custos Consort and the Sebastian Consort). He studied at the Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, the University of Debrecen and the Music Academy in Vienna; he completed his master course in the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy in Leipzig. He is the father of elementary and secondary gamba education in Hungary.
Members:
Nóra Király – medieval harp, vocal
Sándor Szászvárosi – viola da gamba
Gábor Tokodi – lute
You can find more information about the Custos Consort early music workshops and the work of Sándor Szászvárosi at www.szaszvarosi.hu.
Click here for a small sample of the concert
Venue: Marble Hall

7 p.m. ART HISTORY FILM CLUB 
The temples of art – Raphael, the Prince of Painters
colour, dubbed Italian film, 90 mins, 2017
Director: Luca Viotto
Screenplay: Laura Allievi
In the main roles: Flavio Parenti, Angela Curri, Marco Cocci, Enrico Loverso, Vincenzo Farinella, Antonio Natali, Antonio Paolucci
Cinematography: Massimiliano Gatti
Cutting: Valentina Corti
Music: Matteo Curallo
Producer: Federica Abaterusso, Roberto Andreucci, Francesco Invernizzi
http://indavideo.hu/video/A_muveszet_templomai_-_Raffaello_A_festofejedelem_3D
The film pays tribute to one of the foremost Renaissance masters and one of the pivotal figures of art history: Raffaello Sanzio.
Raphael, one of the members of the famed Renaissance triad besides Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo Buonarroti, was seen as a genius by both his contemporaries and by later generations. Not only did he build a bridge between the Renaissance and Mannerism but he also took figurative depiction to unprecedented heights.
The film presents thirty-eight works by Raphael and six compositions inspired by his art selected from the art treasures found in the Raphael House in Urbino, the Uffizi in Florence and the Vatican Museum, among others. Viewers are guided through stunning places by renowned art historians such as Vincenzo Farinella, a university professor and an expert on Raphael; Antonio Natali, a former director of the Uffizi Gallery; and Antonio Paolucci, the director of the Vatican Museum.
The analyses of artworks and the exquisitely detailed close-ups of them are supplemented by short dramatized inserts based on historical reconstructions, allowing an insight into the daily life of the master and important events in his life.
Venue: Schickedanz Hall

8.30 p.m. MÚZIKA – Czutor and Madonna
What does a contemporary song writer see in Raphael’s works? What stories come to life for a modern-day troubadour? These questions will be answered in song.
Story-telling through music and song in front of Raphael’s Esterházy Madonna; the event continues on the stage in the Marble Hall from 8.45 p.m. to 9.30 p.m.
Venue: European Art 1250-1600, Room XIX; meeting point: at the entrance to the exhibition (1st floor, middle glass door)
Marble Hall from 8.45 p.m.

GUIDED TOUR IN ENGLISH
19.00 Ágnes Mertus – Baroque Art and Culture in Early Modern Hungary (Art in Hungary 1600 – 1800)

6 p.m.–9.30 p.m. WORKSHOP – Creative Corner
Writing in the pictures. Making banderoles and other Renaissance decorations in gold and black.
Led by: Fruzsina Kun
Venue: Romanesque Hall

PHOTO CORNER – BE RAPHAEL!
Put on a painter’s robe and hat, grab a palette and a brush, and you are ready to pose in front of your masterpiece in the making.
You can share the photo instantly with your friends and the whole world #IamRaphael #museumplus #MuseumofFineArts #szépmű
Venue: Romanesque Hall 6 p.m. – 9 p.m.
The 2020 Museum+ evenings organised around the new permanent exhibitions of the Museum of Fine Arts can be visited free of charge thanks to the generous support of OTP Bank and MVM Hungarian Electricity Plc.

We kindly inform you that due to monument protection regulations the number of participants in the lectures and guided tours is limited and on a first come, first served basis. Please make your plans accordingly.

We reserve the right to change the above programme.

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