I came here on my free afternoon while on Uniworld Christmas market River Cruise from Passau to Budapest. I spent 3 hours here, good place to come when it rains, which it was raining. I love glass and porcelain art. Cost 7 euros for museum fee.
This is the largest glass works art collection in the world. You take elevator to the 4th floor and meander and meander like Alice in Wonderland, all the way down, to rooms and rooms and more rooms and "Did I already see this?" "Have I already been here?" A lot of the rooms did not have any lighting, but when you walk in there, the lighting turns on. I told the man at the front desk that many of the rooms the lights did not turn on, no matter where I walked and waved my arms. He apologized and said each room was suppose to light up. I am giving my experience here 4 stars not 5 stars because the man at the counter isn't very friendly at all.
It houses the greatest and most extensive collection of Bohemian glass anywhere in the world, dating from 1650 till 1950. Jugendstil glass is particularly well represented, and there are over 1000 Loetz pieces, including many of the celebrated Hofstötter vases shown at the 1900 Paris Exposition.
In 1985 astronaut Neil Armstrong cut the ribbon at the opening ceremony of this museum, which is filled with more than 30,000 invaluable pieces of glass and crystal, representing a variety of styles and covering centuries of glass-making history. The museum website, www.glasmuseum.de is in German but is easy to navigate and includes lots of photos. I cannot find the brochure I got from the museum that tells how the collection grew, and interesting history (how one person could collect soooo many pieces), so I could tell some of it here. read more