Schwarzenberg Palace
Museum
About Schwarzenberg Palace
Schwarzenberg Palace stands out immediately on Hradčany Square with its extraordinary sgraffito facade that tricks your eye into seeing three-dimensional pyramid stonework where there's actually flat wall. Inside, you'll find the National Gallery's baroque collection featuring works by Czech masters like Karel Škréta and European artists including Rubens and Cranach. The palace itself, built in 1563, competes with the paintings for your attention with its Renaissance chambers and period ceilings.
You'll move through intimate rooms rather than vast museum halls, making this feel more like exploring a private collector's home than trudging through endless galleries. The sgraffito technique covers nearly every exterior surface, created by layering colored plaster and scraping away sections to reveal patterns underneath. Inside, natural light filters through original windows, illuminating canvases in a way that feels authentic to how they were meant to be viewed. The baroque paintings include religious scenes, portraits, and still lifes that showcase the dramatic chiaroscuro technique of the period.
Most visitors rush past the exterior without realizing the 'stonework' is actually an optical illusion, so spend time studying the facade before entering. Entry costs 150 CZK for adults, and unlike Prague's major museums, you'll rarely encounter crowds here. The collection is genuinely excellent but compact, perfect if you want quality baroque art without the overwhelming scale of the National Gallery's main venues.
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