Creation of the Notre Dame Work Foundation 1246 (≈ 1246)
First documentary mention of the foundation.
1347
Construction of Gothic wing
Construction of Gothic wing 1347 (≈ 1347)
Sprocket of the Frauenhaus.
1579
Addition of the Renaissance Wing
Addition of the Renaissance Wing 1579 (≈ 1579)
Work by Hans Thoman Uhlberger.
1681
Link from Strasbourg to France
Link from Strasbourg to France 1681 (≈ 1681)
Time limit of collections.
1931
Museum Foundation
Museum Foundation 1931 (≈ 1931)
Created by Hans Haug.
1944
Museum bombardment
Museum bombardment 1944 (≈ 1944)
Destruction during World War II.
1956
Re-opening after restoration
Re-opening after restoration 1956 (≈ 1956)
Complete museum path.
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui Aujourd'hui (≈ 2025)
Position de référence.
Heritage classified
Maison de l'Oeuvre-Notre-Dame : classification by list of 1862; Facades and roofs of the 17th century buildings and 18th century interior staircase from the old Marshal Poele, formerly located 138 Grande-Rue and rebuilt in the courtyard of the museum: classification by decree of 21 December 1927
Key figures
Hans Haug - Director of museums in Strasbourg
Creator of the museum and pioneer.
Wilhelm von Bode - History of Art
Designer of the second art museum.
Hans Thoman Uhlberger - Renaissance architect
Author of the 1579 wing.
Erwin de Steinbach - Master of the cathedral
Author of preserved drawings.
Konrad Witz - 15th Century Painter
Works exhibited at the museum.
Hans Baldung - Painter and engraver
Major paintings of collections.
Origin and history
The Museum of the Work of Our Lady, located in Strasbourg in the former Frauenhaus (House of the Work), is dedicated to the arts of the Middle Ages and Renaissance in the Upper Rhine (Alsace, Baden, Rhineland Switzerland, Palatinate). Founded in 1931 by Hans Haug, it merges four collections: the deposited sculptures of the cathedral, the fonds of the Society for the Conservation of Historic Monuments of Alsace, the works of the second museum of fine arts designed by Wilhelm von Bode, and those of the Hohenlohe-Museum. The building itself, the historic seat of the Fondation de l'Ouvre Notre-Dame (created in 1246), combines a Gothic wing of 1347 and a Renaissance wing of 1579, with a spiral staircase and a portal by architect Hans Thoman Uhlberger.
The museum's collections cover statuary, stained glass, paintings, architectural drawings, furniture and tapestries. Among the major pieces are the original statues of the cathedral gates (XIIIth–XVIth centuries), paintings by Konrad Witz, Hans Baldung or Sébastien Stoskopff, and a rare collection of Gothic drawings, including those by Erwin of Steinbach and Ulrich of Ensingen. The medieval garden, recreated in 1937 by Hans Haug, is inspired by the treatises of Albert the Great and features ornamental, medicinal and aromatic plants used in the Middle Ages. A funeral slab of Louis V de Lichtenberg (1471) and a Romanesque baptismal tank are also exposed.
The museum was deeply marked by the destruction of the Second World War: bombarded in 1944, it was restructured in 1946 and reopened in 1956 in its present form. Hans Haug, pioneer of modern museography, applied the concept of a "museum of ambiance", combining works of art and architectural elements on an immersive journey. The 17th century carved wooden galleries, saved from Strasbourg houses destroyed during the Great Perceia, or the fragments of the Jube of the cathedral (demoli in 1682) illustrate this approach. Today, the museum remains a unique testimony of Strasbourg art, at the crossroads of Latin and Germanic influences.
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Collection
De la célèbre Tête de Christ dite de Wissembourg, l'un des plus anciens vitraux connu, aux corbeilles de verres cristallines peintes par le maître de la nature-morte Sébastien Stoskopff, ses collections remarquables sont autant de manifestations de la vitalité de l'art strasbourgeois.
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