
The story
Climb the main staircase and two vast murals face each other across the hall. On one wall the Swedish painter Carl Larsson shows King Gustav Vasa riding into Stockholm in 1523, at the founding of an independent Sweden. On the wall opposite hangs Midvinterblot, Larsson's dark scene of a legendary Norse king given up in sacrifice to end a famine. He finished it in 1915, the museum rejected it as too grim, and for more than 80 years it hung elsewhere. Only in 1997 did the Nationalmuseum buy it and place it where Larsson had always meant it to go.
The building was raised for the nation's art by the German architect Friedrich August Stüler and opened in 1866, a Renaissance-style palace on the Blasieholmen waterfront facing the royal residence across the water. After years of restoration it reopened in 2018 with its original colours and daylight brought back.
Inside runs the sweep of Swedish art, from Larsson's sunlit family interiors to Anders Zorn's portraits and open-air bathers, hung beside older European masters including Rembrandt. The Nationalmuseum also keeps one of Sweden's great design collections, running from 18th-century silver and Gustavian furniture to modern glass and ceramics.
Collection
38 works
La GrenouillèrePierre-Auguste Renoir, 1869
Portrait of a violinistAnne Vallayer-Coster, 1773
The Conspiracy of Claudius CivilisRembrandt, 1661
The Lady with a Fan, The Artist's WifeAlexander Roslin, 1768
The JuristGiuseppe Arcimboldo, 1566
Truth, Time and HistoryFrancisco Goya, 1797
The TownAugust Strindberg, 1903
Dancing FairiesAugust Malmström, 1866
Midwinter's SacrificeCarl Larsson, 1915
The Kitchen MaidRembrandt, 1651
The Triumph of VenusFrançois Boucher, 1740
Mother Anthony's TavernPierre-Auguste Renoir, 1866
Bringing Home the Body of King Karl XII of SwedenGustaf Cederström, 1884
OmnibusAnders Zorn, 1891
The CookGiuseppe Arcimboldo, 1570
Thor's Fight with the GiantsMårten Eskil Winge, 1872
Valdemar Atterdag holding Visby to ransomCarl Gustaf Hellqvist, 1882
Young Boy Peeling a PearÉdouard Manet, 1868
Landscape from BretagnePaul Gauguin, 1889
Saint SebastianPietro Perugino, 1490
Simeon in the TempleRembrandt, 1669
Breakfast TimeHanna Hirsch-Pauli, 1887
King Candaules of Lydia Showing his Wife to GygesJacob Jordaens, 1646
Kneeling NunMartin van Meytens, 1731
Landscape with the Fall of IcarusJoos de Momper the Younger, 1607