4 result(s) for acb gallery budapest in Community & Culture
'Colours, Realism, Surprises' Exhibition, Kieselbach Gallery
- 22 Apr 2021 7:10 AM
- community & culture
Kieselbach’s spring exhibition Colours, Realism, Surprises, fills a 480-page catalogue with works available for sale.
'Gallery Weekend Budapest', 7 – 8 March
- 10 Feb 2020 8:31 AM
- community & culture
This contemporary art festival will be organized for the sixth time here in 2020, when again for a weekend everything cultural in Budapest focuses on contemporary fine arts presentations, exhibition openings, and tours of the best galleries.
Agnes Denes: ’Visual Philosophy 1968-2018’ Exhibition, ACB Gallery Budapest
- 22 Nov 2018 8:18 AM
- community & culture
Now on until 31 January. Agnes Denes (1931, Budapest) is a Hungarian-born American artist based in New York.
Árpád Fenyvesi Tóth: 'Splendid Isolation' Exhibition, ACB Gallery Budapest
- 1 Oct 2018 9:13 AM
- community & culture
Now on until 9 November. Arranged in all three spaces of acb Gallery, the exhibition reveals this noteworthy oeuvre, which has mostly remained unknown and unaddressed by art historical narratives.
'Colours, Realism, Surprises' Exhibition, Kieselbach Gallery
- 22 Apr 2021 7:10 AM
- community & culture
Kieselbach’s spring exhibition Colours, Realism, Surprises, fills a 480-page catalogue with works available for sale.
'Gallery Weekend Budapest', 7 – 8 March
- 10 Feb 2020 8:31 AM
- community & culture
This contemporary art festival will be organized for the sixth time here in 2020, when again for a weekend everything cultural in Budapest focuses on contemporary fine arts presentations, exhibition openings, and tours of the best galleries.
Agnes Denes: ’Visual Philosophy 1968-2018’ Exhibition, ACB Gallery Budapest
- 22 Nov 2018 8:18 AM
- community & culture
Now on until 31 January. Agnes Denes (1931, Budapest) is a Hungarian-born American artist based in New York.
Árpád Fenyvesi Tóth: 'Splendid Isolation' Exhibition, ACB Gallery Budapest
- 1 Oct 2018 9:13 AM
- community & culture
Now on until 9 November. Arranged in all three spaces of acb Gallery, the exhibition reveals this noteworthy oeuvre, which has mostly remained unknown and unaddressed by art historical narratives.