bg Timisoara

Timișoara Art Museum

- Piața Unirii 1 -
The first stage of the construction started all the way back in 1752 and was completed in 1754 as a residence of the first president of the civil administration. During a reconstruction in 1774, the palace was expanded with a new wing in the direction of the main square. After the suppression of the in 1849 and until 1861, the building served as the administrative headquarters of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar, and from 1861 it again functioned as a county palace. In the period between 1885 and 1886, the French-born architect Jacques Klein made interventions primarily concerning the facades of the building, and at the same time, the wing separating the inner courtyards was demolished. After the , the Faculty of Agronomy of the Polytechnic Institute functioned in the building, which later became the Banat University of Agricultural Sciences and Veterinary Medicine. Until 1944, the Prefecture of Timiș-Torontal County functioned here, and between 1944 and 1958, it housed the commandment of the Soviet troops stationed in Timișoara. From 1984 it became the house of the Art Department of the Museum of Banat, which on 1 January 2006 became the Timișoara Art Museum.
The building is visible in an old postcard
The mansard roof of the Neo-Baroque building contains loads of circular dormers crowned with a and two larger dormers crowned with an open pointed adorned with a . These dormers are also decorated with garlands and , which also count for the surrounding fragments, which are also decorated with some ornamental vases. The that stretch all the way up from the second until the third floor, are all beautifully adorned and crowned with a Composite . Above and underneath the third and second floor windows, you can see more volutes, pediments, and cartouches, but also foliage and geometric forms. The lovely wooden entrance doors are surrounded by even more ornamental vases, volutes, and pilasters, but also by several .
An old postcard that shows the building on the right