- The Kraków
Cloth Hall (Polish:
Sukiennice,
pronounced [sukʲɛˈɲːit͡sɛ]), in
Lesser Poland,
dates to the
Renaissance and is one of the city's most recognizable...
- The
Gallery of 19th-Century
Polish Art at
Sukiennice (Polish:
Galeria Sztuki Polskiej XIX
wieku w Sukiennicach), is a
division of the
National Museum,...
-
partitioned Poland. He is
famous for
monumental paintings now at the
Sukiennice National Art
Gallery in Kraków and at the MNW in Warsaw. Chełmoński was...
- at the
Siemiradzki Room of the
Sukiennice Museum Gallery of 19th-Century
Polish Art,
housed at the
Renaissance Sukiennice Hall in Main Square, Kraków (listed...
- and churches. The
center of the
square is
dominated by the
Cloth Hall (
Sukiennice),
rebuilt in 1555 in the
Renaissance style,
topped by a
attic or Polish...
- (row houses) and
noble residences,
stands the
Renaissance cloth hall
Sukiennice (currently
housing gift shops,
restaurants and
merchant stalls) with the...
- A
cloth hall or
linen hall (German: Gewandhaus; Polish:
Sukiennice; French:
Halle aux draps; Dutch: Lakenhal) is a
historic building located in the centre...
- by
ornate churches, city
tenements and town halls.
Cloth hall
markets (
sukiennice) were once an
abundant feature of
Polish urban architecture. The mountainous...
- (Stare Miasto), the Main
Market Square (Rynek Główny), the
Cloth Hall (
Sukiennice), the
Barbican (Barbakan), St. Florian's Gate,
Kazimierz and the Wawel...
-
gallery in the
Sukiennice Museum in Kraków,
where it is
usually displa**** in the
Prussian Homage Hall.
Renovation work
started in the
Sukiennice Museum in...