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Kresija, the neoclassical palace in which the gallery is located, was built after the massive earthquake that shock Ljubljana in 1895 the aftermath of which greatly shaped the architectural flavour of contemporary Ljubljana. The building, designed by Leopold Theyer, overlooks the Ljubljanica River and the famed Triple Bridge.
Though the palace already hosted an important exhibition of Slovenian impressionists back in 1919 (organised by the National Gallery Society), the Kresija Gallery itself was opened in 2000. It is joined by the nearby Magistrat Gallery and the City Hall Atria gallery space, with the sales gallery for contemporary fine arts DobraVaga also not far away.
At the beginning, the programme of the Kresija Gallery focused mostly on architecture and design exhibitions, but it soon started to feature Slovenian visual arts authors. Occasionally, exhibitions also relate to municipal projects or projects resulting in cooperation between the City of Ljubljana and its domestic or international partners. Due to the frequency of the exhibitions, it is hard to make any comprehensive overview of the gallery's curatorial scope – nevertheless one can mention the painters Sašo Vrabič, Aleksij Kobal and Arjan Pregl; the designer Tomato Košir; the fashion designers TheCollective; and the hard-to-pin-down works of artists like Marija Mojca Pungerčar, Oto Rimele, Maša Gala, etc.
There was also a group exhibition of Pulitzer-winning photos by Reuters' photographers, an exhibition by the well-known photographer James Nachtwey, and several displays of various architectural open calls, researches, solutions, etc. Concerts and performances frequently accompany exhibition openings.
In recent years, has Galerija Kresija collaborated with the Ljubljana Puppet Theatre on the cross-European project All Strings Attached: The Pioneers of European Puppetry and hosted parts of the Blind Date Convention, Festival of the Artist’s Book, the Open House Slovenia Festival, the Biennial of Graphic Arts, the Slovenia Press Photo Festival, etc. It also collaborates with Strip Core (for example, on the display of works by the New York-based, Croatian comic artist Danijel Žeželj) and the Architects' Society of Ljubljana (DAL).
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