The icon of Czech functionalist architecture is home to collections of art from the 19th century to the present, which include works by key Czech and international modern and contemporary artists. Since 2018, a gradual revitalization of the collection's exhibitions has been underway.
The studio of František Bílek is open to visitors in the villa. In part of the building there is a permanent exhibition which, in addition to the original interior furnishings, also presents Bílek's works from his peak creative period.
The collection exhibition on the first floor of the monastery complex presents the transformation of the form and function of artwork over three centuries with more than two hundred exhibits in the fields of painting, sculpture and artistic craftsmanship.
We run a museum with the art collections of the Lobkowicz family. It is a unique collection of works by world-famous painters, rare musical instruments and manuscripts, art objects, ceramics and weapons.
The Kinsky Palace, NGP's central building on Old Town Square, regularly hosts the most important short-term projects. In past years, works by Gerhard Richter, Rousseau the Customs Officer and Jiří Kolář have been exhibited here. Follow the exhibition programme on our website.
The National Gallery uses the riding hall space for short-term exhibition projects. The riding hall is located in the garden of the early Baroque palace complex built for Albrecht von Wallenstein by Italian architects Andrea Spezza and Nicolo Sebregondi.
The Old Masters II exhibition is a continuation of the Old Masters exhibition located in the opposite Schwarzenberg Palace. The two complement each other to form a single entity, while presenting magnificent works of art in different contexts.
Exhibitions of art from the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries are held in the building. In the eastern wing of the building there is a representative apartment of the Mayor of Prague furnished in the Art Deco style.
The Clam-Gallas Palace in Prague's Old Town is one of the most important architectural monuments of Prague and the Czech Republic. It is one of the top works of Prague's Baroque architecture and is an excellent example of the Baroque living and lifestyle of the aristocracy of the time.
Salm Palace is a classical three-winged palace-type building on Hradčany Square. It was originally intended to be a luxury apartment building that belonged to the Schwarzenbergs, who combined it with the neighbouring Schwarzenberg Palace. In 2004, the building was taken over by the National Gallery Prague.
We run an exhibition of Josef Sudek's work, located in his apartment. We manage exhibitions of Czech photography in the interwar period and the history of photographic pragensia from the mid-19th century to the present.