The building itself is fascinating: known since 1785 as the Hentschel-Mühle (Hentschel Mill), it was bought in 1879 by Eduard Leonhardi, a pupil of Ludwig Richter. It converted into a studio for young artists, and elaborately painted by Charles Palmié; pictures by Leonhardi were displayed here from 1885 to the early 1960s. From 1963 onwards the museum was used by different groups of artists for exhibitions, usually of young artists. In the 1970s and ‘80s, with diverse and politically daring exhibitions and a resonance that extended far beyond this region, a chapter of the history of progressive art was written here. Today, the municipal gallery primarily shows changing exhibitions of contemporary Saxon art and a permanent presentation of paintings by Eduard Leonhardi.
Opening times
Tue to Fri 2 to 6 pm, Sat and Sun 10 am to 6 pm
Admission fees
Adults €4.00, reduced €2.50 Children up to and including the age of 6 free of charge Family ticket €6.00 / 4.00 Groups €3.00 / 2.00 pp Group guided tours (min. 10 persons) €1.50 / 1.00 pp Fridays (except holidays) admission free of charge Annual ticket for the Museums of the City of Dresden €30.00, families €40.00
Transport connection
Bus nos. 61/63/84/521 to "Körnerplatz", Elevated and Suspension Railway, City tour stop "Grundstraße"
Extras/offers
shopspecial exhibitionslectures
Misc. extras
Store, lectures, catalogs, newsletters, art talks and readings
Handicapped accessible
- handicapped accessible toilet
- limited handicapped accessible
Educational offers
On request: Guided tours on the history of the house and Eduard Leonhardi and on current special exhibitions, guided tours for school classes