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museum
of applied art
Contacts
Address: Arsenalo g. 3A, LT-01100, Vilnius.
Tel.: (+370 ~ 5) 262 80 80, (+370 ~ 5) 212 18 13.
E-mail: tdm@takas.lt
http://www.ldm.lt/TDM/Index.htm
Head of the Museum – Birutė Vosylytė.
Information for Visitor
Opening hours:
Tuesday to Saturday 11–18;
Sunday, National Holiday Eve 11–16.
Admission:
adults – 6 Lt;
pupils, students and OAP – 3 Lt;
child under 7, disabled, ICOM member – free.
Guided tours:
lithuanian language – 30 Lt;
foreign language – 50 Lt.
Access:
the Museum is fitted for visitors with mobility impairments.
Exhibitions
Present
Exhibitions >
Archive Exhibitions >
The Old
Arsenal
The history of Vilnius Lower Castle and its buildings is complex and spans
several centuries. The Applied Art Museum or the eastern block of the Old
Arsenal is one of the buildings of the Lower Castle. More detailed data on
the buildings of the Lower Castle dates back to 16–17th centuries. The data
on the periods of 13–14th centuries and earlier is derived mainly from
archeological investigations.
The 1972–1978 archeological investigations of the Old Arsenal revealed
5–7-meter-deep cultural layer. This layer was bound to contain the signs of
six archeological periods, the lowest cultural layer edge having traces of
the settlement from the late Neolithic period, the Bronze Age, which was
washed off by tide waters of the rivers Neris and Vilnelė. After some time
the water lowered, and a considerable layer of marsh peat accumulated on the
top of the former settlement. The site came back to more active life only by
the beginning of the first millennium; it gained even more impetus during
the 12–14th centuries. The cultural layer of the period contained living
quarters and outbuildings, remains of craftsmen’s workshops, scraps of
metal, bone and leather works; abundance of pottery made by throwing were
discovered there, too. This data provides basis to conclude that in the
first half of the 13th century craftsmen, mainly shoemakers, densely
populated the northeastern part of the Lower castle area. It seems that in
the 13th century the wooden settlement at the foot of the castle was
fortified; a little mound and a moat encircled it. The investigations of the
Arsenal revealed remains of three subsequent layers of timber road. The road
was made of wooden boards and reinforced by logs at the sides. The cobble
road leading across all Lower Castle territory towards the gate of the
castle was laid in the middle of the 15th century - early 16th century on
the top of the 11-12th c. wooden road.
The wooden housing seems to have been pulled down not earlier than the
middle of the 15th century, and instead the eastern masonry wall of the
Lower castle had been built, 2.7 meters in height and 9-10 meters in width.
The bottom of the wall was mostly large stone masonry. At the confluence of
the rivers Neris and Vilnele the eastern wall terminated in a square
brickwork tower. The brickwork was mostly of flying Flemish bonding (two
stretches between each header in the same course). The fragments of this
tower can be seen upon entering the museum on the right side of the stairs.
After the fire, which most probably followed one of the encounters with the
German knights in the second half of the 14th century, the walls of the
tower were reinforced, and the tower itself enlarged. The eastern defensive
wall was found to contain four-meter tall and three-meter wide pointed arch
castle gate, which obviously led to the so-called Crooked castle (Curvum
castrum). Today this gate receives the visitors of the exhibition.
In the mid-15th century, a sumptuous masonry palace was constructed in the
northeastern part of the Lower castle territory; marble inlays of different
colors decorated its interior. In the middle of the 16th century, the
Arsenal was built on the site of the palace and the remains of the Lower
castle defensive wall. Sigismund the Old, the Grand Duke of Lithuania and
King of Poland (1467-1548) was responsible for constructing the Arsenal. The
construction project was supervised by Ulrich Hosius (mentioned in Vilnius
about 1500–1535). The Arsenal was expanded and completed by Sigismund
Augustus (1520-1572), the Grand Duke of Lithuania and King of Poland. At
that time the construction work was observed by Hiob Braitfus, the overseer
of Vilnius castles, architect and engineer who had been active in Vilnius
since 1557 and had organized production of weapons and gun powder in the
town. At that time the Arsenal was comprised of eastern, northern and
western blocks situated around a square courtyard. The eastern block was the
main part of the Arsenal, it was a late Gothic two-storey building with a
gable roof and two frontals at the ends. Both floors of the building had a
spacious three-aisle hall. In the middle of the 16th century, the Lower
castle Arsenal was the largest one in the Polish-Lithuanian state. In the
second half of the 16th century, the Arsenal was re-constructed, and a
Renaissance attic decorated in double arch niches was added to the eastern
block. The eastern block is the surviving residue of the Arsenal. The Old
arsenal was represented on the maps of Vilnius by Frans Hoogenbergh in 1545,
T. Makowski in 1660 and Fiurstenhof in 1737. The Arsenal was depicted in
several watercolors by Franciszek Smuglewicz (1745-1807), too. A part of the
Old arsenal in front of Sereikiskes Park was depicted by the painter Józef
Peszka (1769-1831). The Arsenal was badly damaged in the middle of the 17th
century war with Russia. Until the end of the 18th century the building
stood half in ruins. In 1780 Sapieha Kazimierz Nestor (1754-1798) allocated
funds for the repair of the Arsenal. At that time the attic of the eastern
block was pulled down and the ground floor was covered by a gable roof. In
1845-1848, the northern wall of the eastern block was equipped with firing
apertures. In early 20th century, the northern block of the Arsenal was
pulled down and a new building was constructed instead. The western block
was destroyed by fire in 1944. Only fragments of the eastern block have
survived until 1977. Archeological, historical and oceanographic data
enabled the historian Evaldas Purlys to reconstruct the eastern block of the
Old Arsenal and accommodate it to the needs of a museum. The architect
Sigitas Lasavickas, and archeologists Albertas Lisanka, Irena Juciene have
also investigated this significant building.
In 1987, the reconstructed eastern block of the Old Arsenal housed the first
exposition of applied art of the 14-20th centuries. In 1996-1999 the museum
featured exhibition “Baroque Applied Art in Lithuania”. This exhibition was
a part of the European Council cultural routes program “Baroque Route in
Lithuania”. The Museum of Applied Art featured the exhibition “The Battle of
Grunewald” which had been tremendously successful. The focus of the
exhibition was the famous battle piece by Jan Mateiko “The Battle of
Grunewald”, painted in 1878. (Prepared by Audronė Bliujienė)
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