Museums in Cologne


Germany - Cologne - Dusseldorf - Frankfurt - Munich - Stuttgart - Hamburg - Berlin
"History is the only laboratory we have in which to test the consequences of thought."
Etienne Gilson

It would be the foremost desire of a tourist to know the exact past of the place he/she is visiting; and museum is definitely the centre where a traveler gets enough information on the history of that place. Therefore, while paying a visit to the city of Cologne, you must see the Museums in Cologne where you will the consequences of thought of the dwellers of this place.

Cologne has been aptly termed as the City of museums. Cologne owes this designation, in contrast to several other major European cities by virtue of its outstanding commitment to art of plentiful ordinary citizens.

Having had destroyed most of Cologne's first generation of museum buildings during the Second World War, the city now mesmerizes travelers by the museums presenting a laconic history of museum architecture in the second half of the 20th century. Museums in Cologne have special exhibitions alongside their permanent collections.

Museums in Cologne offer conventional picture galleries in Germany, where visitors may appreciate the most significant collection of old Cologne paintings, art of the Baroque period involving masterpieces by Rubens and Rembrandt and, in the 19th century section, paintings from the Romantic period, Realism and Symbolism.

Slip into the Museums in Cologne and see the excellence in collection of several hundred works by Pablo Picasso, Peter and Irene Ludwig as well as the collection of the Cologne advocate Joseph Haubrich.

Visiting Museums in Cologne, you may admire art treasures from the early Middle Ages until the end of the Baroque period in the unique ambiance of a medieval church building. You will witness ivory work from the Carolingian period and that of the Saxon emperors, goldsmiths' work, sculptures in wood and stone from the Romanesque to the Baroque period, glass painting, textiles and ecclesiastical treasure art from the Gothic period to the Rococo.

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