ALBERTINA
19 June until 11 October 2026
In 2026, the ALBERTINA Museum is celebrating 250 years of existence. This significant anniversary offers an opportunity to look back upon the eventful history of the collection and the institution itself as well as to look towards the future with optimism and enthusiasm – attitudes that have always been part of the ALBERTINA Museum’s self-conception. Much has already been written about the museum – but nowhere near everything has been said. What stories have yet to be told? What still awaits discovery? And how will the ALBERTINA Museum develop in the future?
Open to New Perspectivs
It is these questions that guide us through this anniversary year’s programming. Three main exhibitions with innovative approaches present the world-famous collection of the ALBERTINA from a new perspective, will usher rarely shown and entirely unknown objects into the spotlight alongside renewed scrutiny of known artistic quantities. A “path of discovery” through the extensive collections of the ALBERTINA encourages visitors to the exhibition Fascination Paper to experience this tradition-steeped medium anew and interact with art from unaccustomed perspectives.
Reappraising the history of the ALBERTINA Museum also entails centering a female personality whose pivotal role in the collection’s founding is frequently overshadowed by that of her husband, Duke Albert of Sachse-Teschen: Archduchess Marie Christine. As the favorite daughter of Empress Maria Theresia, she endowed her marriage with the wealth that made possible such wide-ranging art acquisitions. She had also been active since her youth as an artist in her own right, by virtue of which she wielded important influence over the couple’s collecting pursuits. The Anniversary Exhibition Collecting for the Future devotes itself to this collecting history with a selection that will include precious works ranging from Dürer’s Hare to the expressive drawings of Egon Schiele.
ALBERTINA MUSEUM, VIENNA includes over one million objects, numbers among the world’s most important collections of graphic art, and was founded 250 years ago: the collection of the ALBERTINA Museum. This onceprivate collection has long since become a world-class museum.
That it was Albert of Saxe-Teschen who laid its cornerstone in 1776 is well known. This exhibition, however, sheds light specifically on female contributions to this world-famous collection for the first time. The focus here is on Marie Christine, the favorite daughter of Empress Maria Theresia, and how she worked together with her husband Albert to build the collection in a systematic manner.
It is therefore the collection’s beginnings and the collectors’ respective motives that are explored, here. What profile was the collection intended to develop, and for what purpose was this collecting being done? Which artists were favored? And when did the largest groups of works by figures such as Albrecht Dürer or Egon Schiele arrive here?
These and further questions will be answered with reference to priceless examples such as Dürer’s Hare. In doing so, this presentation shall train its gaze not only on a great past but also forward, into the future.
IMAGES
Johann August Walther: Herzog Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, 1776
30.4 x 23.3 cm, Pinsel in Grau mit Weißhöhungen auf Pergament (© ALBERTINA, Wien)
Johann August Walther: Erzherzogin Marie Christine von Österreich, Gattin des Herzogs Albert von Sachsen-Teschen, 1776
30.1 x 23.4 cm, Pinsel in Grau mit Weißhöhungen auf Pergament (© ALBERTINA, Wien)
Archduchess Marie Christine Habsburg-Lothringen: Reading Letters, Second half of the 18th century
23,9 × 19,3 cm, Watercolor (The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna)
Jakob Alt: Das Palais Herzog Alberts, 1816 27.4 x 40.8 cm, Feder in Schwarz, Aquarell (© ALBERTINA, Wien)
Albrecht Dürer | The Hare | © The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna
Hieronymus Bosch | The Tree Man, ca 1500 | The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna
Pieter Bruegel d. Ä. | Big Fish Eat Little Fish, 1556 | The ALBERTINA Museum, Vienna











