New Alphonse Mucha Museum to Open in Prague

Taking up residence at the refurbished Savarin Palace in Prague's city center, the new Mucha Museum opens in January 2025.

Nov 8, 2024By Emily Snow, MA History of Art, BA Art History & Curatorial Studies
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The Lady of the Camellias (detail) by Alphonse Mucha, 1896. Source: Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

 

Early next year, a brand-new Mucha Museum is set to open its doors in Prague. The new institution follows an extensive palace renovation in the city center—as well as some controversy surrounding the display of Alphonse Mucha’s art in the Czech Republic.

 

Mucha Museum Opens January 2025

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Savarin Palace’s interior in Prague. Photographed by Ruth Fraňková. Source: Radio Prague International.

 

The name Alphonse Mucha has long been synonymous with the term Art Nouveau. The turn-of-the-century Czech artist popularized the aesthetic with his distinctively decorative poster designs. To preserve Mucha’s lasting legacy in his homeland, a brand-new Mucha Museum is opening in Janaury 2025 in Savarin Palace, a newly-renovated Baroque building in Prague’s city center. The museum, which occupies over one thousand square meters of the palace, will house an expansive permanent collection of Alphonse Mucha’s works. It is the result of a collaboration between the Mucha Foundation and Prague-based real estate developers Crestyl.

 

According to a recent statement from the museum’s directors, a debut exhibition will accompany the new Mucha Museum’s grand opening. The exhibition “will present previously unexhibited works, including early oil paintings, hand-drawn studies for decorative documents, items exploring Mucha’s fascination with Freemasonry, and study materials for The Slav Epic.

 

Will Mucha’s Slav Epic Join the New Collection?

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The Celebration of Svantovit (The Slav Epic) by Alphonse Mucha, 1912. Source: Mucha Foundation.

 

Alphonse Mucha was best known for his theatrical posters and commercial advertising designs. However, he was also keen to assert himself as a fine artist. Mucha’s late-career series The Slav Epic did just that, depicting key events from the history of the Slavic people across 20 monumental paintings on canvas. Mucha and Charles Crane, the American philanthropist who funded The Slav Epic, bequeathed the series of paintings to the city of Prague in 1928, the tenth anniversary of Czechoslovakia’s independence.

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Mucha’s gift was conditional upon the city providing a permanent exhibition space for the paintings. Controversially, such a venue has yet to be constructed nearly 100 years later, and The Slav Epic remains at the center of disputes over its exhibition and ownership. The new Mucha Museum hopes that The Slav Epic might finally find its permanent home in Savarin Palace. Marcus Mucha, great-grandson of the artist and director of the Mucha Foundation, said that “a number of negotiations are ongoing” with the city of Prague regarding this aim.

 

The “Only Official” Mucha Museum

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Language of Flowers by Alphonse Mucha, 1900. Source: Mucha Foundation.

 

The new Mucha Museum is more than double the size of Prague’s pre-existing Mucha Museum, located nearby on Pánská Street. As of a few months ago, the Pánská Street institution is no longer affiliated with the Mucha Foundation. Now, the new Mucha Museum in Savarin Palace is positioning itself as “the only official museum dedicated to the Czech artist,” according to its website.

 

Marcus Mucha explained the foundation’s reasons for opening a new Mucha Museum in Prague. “The existing premises were very crowded, especially in the summer,” he said. “We were looking for a new place to enable as many people as possible to admire Mucha’s work. We want the new location of our collections to attract not only tourists, but also Czechs, and become a popular place for them.”

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By Emily SnowMA History of Art, BA Art History & Curatorial StudiesEmily Snow is a contributing writer and art historian based in Amsterdam. She earned an MA in art history from the Courtauld Institute of Art and loves knitting, her calico cat, and everything Victorian.