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Lviv Art Gallery : ウィキペディア英語版
Lviv National Art Gallery

Lviv National Art Gallery (previously - Lwów Art Gallery, Polish: Lwowska Galeria Sztuki), a leading art museum in Ukraine, has over 60,000 artworks in its collection, including works of Polish, Italian, French, German, Dutch and Flemish, Spanish, Austrian and other European artists.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://lvivalive.com/lviv-art-gallery )〕 The gallery is based on a Polish institution, ''Lwowska Galeria Sztuki'', which was founded in 1907 as a municipal museum, following the purchase of the collection of Jan Jakowicz by the city magistrate. Later on, the gallery expanded as the parts of the Władysław Łożyński (1914) and Bolesław Orzechowicz (1929) collections were incorporated. In early 2005 the collection of European art from the 14th to the 18th centuries was transferred to the new premises - the renovated palace-residence of Count Potocki, the former governor of Austrian Galicia. A masterpiece of Georges de La Tour, the 17th-century French artist is presented here on permanent display.
In 1940, after the city of Lviv/Lwów had been occupied by the Soviet Union, Soviet government ordered nationalization of private property. As a result, works from the Lubomirski family museum, the Baworowscy Library, and some other private collections came into the possession of the gallery. All these works had until the 1939 Invasion of Poland belonged either to the Polish state, or to Polish private collectors, as well as Roman - Catholic church.
==Timeline==

* 1897 - city magistrate decides to open an Art Gallery,
* 1902 – first paintings are purchased, those by Jan Styka, Jan Matejko, Wilhelm Leopolski, Feliks Wygrzywalski, Jacek Malczewski and Edward Okuń,
* 1907 – the collection of Jan Jakwicz is purchased. It includes 400 paintings by Raphael, Rembrand, Rubens, Van Dyke, Velasquez, Ribeiry, Watteau and others,
* February 14, 1907 – the gallery officially opens. Its first curator was the Polish painter Marceli Harasimowicz, who served until 1931.
* 1914 – the gallery moves to a palace purchased from historian and writer Władysław Łoziński,
* 1919 – Bolesław Orzechowicz gives his collection to the city. It includes paintings by Matejko, Juliusz Kossak, and Artur Grottger. At that time, the gallery is divided into three departments: Polish art, Western European art, and the Racławice Panorama,
* 1938 – Leon Piniński and Konstanty Brunicki give their collection to the gallery,
* 1939 - fearing the oncoming war, local Polish aristocracy deposits their collection at the gallery,
* 1940 - Soviet occupational authorities nationalizes the gallery. Furthermore, Soviet authorities decide to close several smaller institutions, such as the Ossolineum, Baworowski Library, Historical Museum, Lubomirski Museum and private collections of the Dzieduszycki, Gołuchowski and Sapieha families. The gallery is administered by the Ukrainian Academy of Arts. Several Polish works are destroyed, others are never returned to Poland, and remain in Lviv.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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