Museums devoted to humans’ best friend found around world
In the 1990s, painter David Hockney was so enamored with his dachshunds, Stanley and Boodgie, that he immortalized them in paintings and a book. Starting this month, anyone who loves dachshunds as much as he does can visit what is being called the first museum to honor this favorite breed.
The Dackelmuseum opened in early April in Passau, Germany, a gallery of dachshund memorabilia with a collection of more than 4,500 paintings, books, statues and porcelain wares devoted to Bavaria’s celebrated wiener dog. It is only one of several new museums celebrating man’s — and woman’s — best friend, including the Museum of Dog, which opened last month in North Adams, Mass.
Like the Museum of Dog, the Dackelmuseum grew out of its founders’ love of their canine companions. “No other dog in the world enjoys the same kind of recognition or popularity as the symbol of Bavaria,” Seppi Küblbeck, a founder of the Dackelmuseum, told Reuters.
A few museums around the world devoted to dogs:
DACKELMUSEUM, PASSAU, GERMANY
Küblbeck and Oliver Storz have been collecting dachshund memorabilia for a quarter-century. But the bulk of the collection — about 3,500 items — was acquired from a Belgian musician who sold it because he was getting married, Storz said. An array of books, drawings and porcelain figurines are now crowded into overstuffed display cases.
AMERICAN KENNEL CLUB MUSEUM OF THE DOG, QUEENY PARK, MO.
Just in case Park Avenue didn’t already have enough dogs on display: Next year, the American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog is moving from its current home in suburban St. Louis to a ground-floor gallery space in the Kalikow building, in Midtown Manhattan. The museum has more than 700 works of art, including paintings, porcelain figurines and sculptures, many donated to the museum by members of the club.
BARRYLAND, MUSÉE ET CHIENS DU SAINT-BERNARD, MATIGNY, SWITZERLAND
Where else would one find a museum to honor the St. Bernard? Matigny is at the Great St. Bernard Pass in the Pennine Alps, where for centuries travelers have been greeted by the loyal dogs, known for their prowess in avalanche rescues.
Monks bred St. Bernards in the late 17th century for work and to aid travelers overwhelmed by harsh winter conditions.
The museum, founded in 2006, is next to a Roman amphitheater and houses portrayals of the creatures in literature, art and culture.
DOG COLLAR MUSEUM, LEEDS CASTLE, KENT, ENGLAND
In 1977, Gertrude Hunt donated a collection of more than 60 dog collars to the Leeds Castle Foundation in memory of her husband, John Hunt, an antiques dealer and scholar of Irish history. They became the centerpiece of a collection that includes more than 130 rare collars from the late 15th to 19th century.
The oldest is a Spanish mastiff’s iron collar, worn to protect dogs against bears and wolves that roamed the European countryside.
Collars from the medieval era are studded with spikes and barbed metal. Later, in the 1800s, canine neckwear became more ornate.
MUSEUM OF DOG, NORTH ADAMS, MASS.
David York loves pooches a lot. So much so, in fact, that he opened a dog museum last month in the Berkshires. For the Museum of Dog, in a historic building near the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, York has assembled more than 180 pieces of art, including works by Mary Engel, a sculptor from Athens, Ga., and William Wegman, whose photographs of his Weimaraners are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.