Temporary Exhibitions

Lamut's Art Salon

Gallery

Since 1958, this ministerial house situated in the old town of Kostanjevica na Krki functions as dislocated unit of the Božidar Jakac Art Museum, Lamut’s Art Salon.  The exhibition ground is named after the painter and printmaker Vladimir Lamut (1915 – 1962) whose many works are made in Kostanjevica na Krki.
It is also a site of temporary exhibitions and cultural events.

Temporary Exhibitions

Lapidarium

Gallery

The Lapidarium consists of eight individual exhibiting spaces situated in the south wing of the Monastery tracts. This part of the monastery building was built in the time of the Abbot Friderik Hofstetter (1703-1708) as it is written at the stone plate which is built-in the wall on the courtyard side.
First exhibitions in the lapidarium took place in 2000. The exhibiting area is designed for exhibitions of the established artists as well as for the younger generation. Because of its specific structure the sites of the lapidarium demand reflective use of space by the artist and site-specific installation of the exhibiting projects.

Temporary Exhibitions

Former Monastery Church

Gallery

On the northern side, bounded by the remains of the former monastery halls with a cloister is the courtyard of expansive monastery buildings alongside the most important constituent of the former monastery, the church. The church and the cloister are the only remaining components of the original building dating back to 13th century, when Carinthian Duke, Bernard of Speinheim, built the monastery to fortify his property near Krka river for strategic and economic reasons.
The church which was built shortly after the establishment of the monastery, in 1234, as a three-nave basilica with transversal nave and a couple of chapels at the presbytery which, at its end, has the shape of the square. This suits the ideal of Cistercian architecture, i.e. the bernardinian architectural style. The viewer is attracted by sheaved columns with capitals that carry groins of cloister and are decorated by richly sculpted plant motives of sprouts, palms and wreaths. During the baroque era, the church and monastery as a whole had been radically renovated. In the present time, the architectural elements remain as a fundamental component of this extraordinarily setting, even more so because the church had lost its original function when monastery was dissolved in 1786. Later, the equipment of the church was lost. After demanding restoration and renovation works the Former Convent Church in 1971 was reimagined. As such it represents one of the most beautiful examples of early Gothic (later baroqueized) architecture in Slovenia. Božidar Jakac Art Museum is now used as an exhibiting space where notable artists (Slovene as well as foreign) present their site-specific installations / temporary exhibitions which often receive great attention of experts and wider public alike.