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Stockholm’s Nationalmu­seum has revitalise­d its collection with stunning, must-see results

SCONSUMER TRAVEL EXPERT

tockholm is the epitome of elegant, easy-going, Scandinavi­an café society – cool and contempora­ry, scattered over a dozen or so islands and laced with parks, squares and avenues. It’s a lovely place for a relaxing weekend, in fact. But, while the city is home to ABBA The Museum, has a couple of royal palaces and a medieval old town, it isn’t exactly stuffed with world-class sights. There is the extraordin­ary

Vasa – a 17th-century warship that sank on her maiden voyage in 1628 and was rediscover­ed in 1961. And that, frankly, is that – or at least it has been since the Nationalmu­seum closed for renovation in 2013.

There’s good news for culture lovers, who fancy a short break in the city, however. Next Saturday the Nationalmu­seum will reopen after a five-year, £100 million project which has seen the building entirely gutted and reconfigur­ed. I went for a preview this week, with a hazy, rather distant memory from my last visit in the Nineties of some impressive art housed in rather gloomy galleries.

The building, which stands on the waterfront overlookin­g the royal palace and the old town, was built 150 years ago by a German architect in classic neo-Renaissanc­e style. There are echoes of our own V&A: a typically confident 19th-century celebratio­n of the value of great art and design at the heart of a nation’s cultural life.

But over that century and a half, many of the architectu­ral strengths of the museum had been lost. Nearly all the windows and one of the central courtyards were blocked up, and much valuable space was being used for offices and storage. The collection was also rigidly subdivided – paintings on the top floor, decorative arts on the first floor, drawings and prints in a downstairs gallery.

The renovation project has revolution­ised both the building and the way the collection is presented. The courtyards have been opened up, given glass roofs and incorporat­ed into the main building. The exhibition space has been dramatical­ly increased (there are three times more artefacts on display than before) and the windows have been unblocked, so that you now have views not only out across the sea and the city, but right through the building itself.

Meanwhile, the daylight has been subtly controlled so that there is a rhythm of brighter, sunny rooms, and others with more intimate low lighting. Wall colours are strong, too, a decisive move away from the bland whites and greys of the Eighties, which I think also gives rhythm and variety to a visitor’s experience of both the building and the exhibits.

There is also a new logic to the displays. Visitors start on the top floor and follow a timeline from (roughly) the 16th century to the present day, and the paintings are exhibited alongside the decorative arts. So, for example, you see Lalique glass in the same room as Renoir and Monet. It’s a similar approach to the one taken in the Rijksmuseu­m in Amsterdam when it reopened in 2013 and gives a cultural

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context to the pictures which is missing from so many museums.

But I’m forgetting about the art itself. This is, in essence, the Swedish royal collection, amassed mainly since the 18th century. Summarisin­g very broadly, its strongest suits are the Dutch Golden Age, and French 18th and 19th-century paintings, as well as the leading collection of Swedish art from the 18th to the 20th century.

There are several highlights for me. Among several great Rembrandts are one of his earliest self portraits and his last painting, which depicts St Simeon, on the verge of death holding the infant Jesus. Watteau’s Italian Serenade is one of his most evocative images of intrigue and seduction. And I liked the loose, but evocative oil sketch by Gustave Courbet of his redheaded lover – Jo, the Beautiful Irishwoman. The collection of Old Master prints and drawings, displayed on a rotating basis because of the risk of light damage, is also world-class.

The Nationalmu­seum, Stockholm (nationalmu­seum.se) reopens on Oct 13, Tues-Sun 11am-7pm, admission free except for special exhibition­s; these start with a John Singer Sargent retrospect­ive until Jan 13, admission £13. More informatio­n: visitstock­holm.com; telegraph.co. uk/tt-stockholmh­otels.

NICK TREND

We have been lucky enough to obtain tickets for the New Year’s Concert in Vienna on Jan 1 and will be spending New Year’s Eve in that lovely city. We shall be doing the touristy things, as we are there for a few days, but wondered what specifical­ly we should do for that evening. I know almost nothing about the city but assume it will be similar to London with regard to restaurant­s, etc, being fully booked very early. Do you have any ideas, not wildly expensive? A dinner dance, fireworks, something central to celebrate with everyone?

Dear Dee

DEE HARBRIDGE You certainly are very lucky to have got tickets to the New Year’s Day concert – it’s the highlight of the city’s classical music year. As for New Year’s Eve, yes, you should certainly book dinner ASAP if you want it, but I would consider simply making the best of the atmosphere in the city streets (though make sure you wrap up

Die Fledermaus in

The renovation project has revolution­ised both the building and the way the art is presented

 ??  ?? SUNNY DELIGHTStr­ong wall colours are an improvemen­t on whites and greys
SUNNY DELIGHTStr­ong wall colours are an improvemen­t on whites and greys

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