Nuremberg Toy Museum

Nuremberg Toy Museum

The Nuremberg Toy Museum, also called Lydia Bayer Museum
Established 1971
Location Nuremberg
Type Art Museum
Visitors > 150,000
Website museums.nuremberg.de

The Nuremberg Toy Museum (also known as Lydia Bayer Museum[1]) in Nuremberg, Bavaria, is a municipal museum, which was founded in 1971. It is considered to be one of the most well known toy museums in the world, depicting the cultural history of toys from antiquity to the present.

History

Hallersches Haus

The toy museum's building, located in Karlstraße 13-15, can be dated back to 1517 as being the property of Wilhelm Haller senior, member of a patrician family. Jeweler Paul Kandler bought the house in 1611 and had the front rebuilt for the first time (probably by Jakob Wolff senior). The oriel (this type of oriel is called chörlein) was constructed roughly around 1720. A distinctive feature of the Hallersches Haus, but also of many other houses in Nuremberg, is the “Dockengalerie”, which is a wooden gallery built around an inner courtyard, connecting the adjacent buildings. „Docken“ refer to turned wooden balusters used for construction galleries as well as to make limbless wooden dolls. The estate was badly damaged during the Second World War, but was rebuilt in the following years. Furthermore, the building is one of the stops of the “Historical Mile Nuremberg”.

Lydia and Paul Bayer

The core of the museum’s collection is approximately 12,000 toys, which have been collected over decades by Lydia (1897-1961) and Paul Bayer (1896-1982). Mr and Mrs Bayer had already begun to put together a comprehensive collection of toys in the early 1920s when toys had hardly any historico-cultural value attached to them. The private Museum Lydia Bayer located in Neubaustraße in Würzburg was open to the public.

Museum

The city of Nuremberg took over Mr and Mrs Bayer’s stocks in 1966. Thanks to the support of the aid association, the Hallersches Haus in Karlstraße was ready to open in 1971.

The toy museum has turned into an extraordinarily successful museum with international recognition. The exhibits area was expanded to 1,200 m² in 1989 and to 1,400 m² due to roof constructions in 1998. The Toy Museum and the German Games Archive in Nuremberg are part of the network Nuremberg Municipal Museums founded in 1994. Other places that are part of the network are the Dürer-Haus, the City Museum Fembohaus, the Tucher Mansion, the Museum for Industrial Culture, the Documentation Centre Nazi Party Rally Grounds and the Memorium Nuremberg Trials.

Gockelreiterbrunnen (Rooster Rider Fountain)

On the occasion of the inauguration of the museum in 1971, which incidentally marks the three hundred anniversary of Dürer’s death, the Gockelreiterbrunnen (Rooster Rider Fountain) designed by Nuremberg artist Michael Mathias Prechtl, was erected in front of the toy museum. The figure depicting the rooster rider is on top of a pipe rising up out of the fountain’s washed concrete basin. The colorfully painted and playfully alienated ceramic figure, which is surrounded by iron bars, fits well into the location in two respects: Not only is its shape reminiscent of a wooden toy referring to the function of the museum, but it also recalls Nuremberg as the city of toys.

Exhibitions

The collection, which contains around 87,000 objects, of which only about five percent are visible in the museum, spans the time from antiquity to the present. It focuses on the development of the toy over the past two hundred years. The great majority of the toys are located in the museum depot, but can also be viewed on the museum’s home page, which gives an overview of the cultural history of the toy. Nuremberg’s special role as a metropolis of toys in the industrial age becomes particularly apparent due to the local toy industry.

Permanent exhibitions and other exhibition spaces

Café La Kritz with backyard railroad
outdoor playground “Shadowland“ (rope net pyramid, rolling ball sculpture, labyrinth, distorting mirror)
In the Beginning was the Wood: wooden toys
Special exhibitions/event room for temporary exhibitions
Cash desk/shop
dolls, dollhouses: doll’s kitchens, paper and tin figures
Since 2000, the second floor also includes a new museum unit with optical toys like the zograscope, the magic lantern or the stereoscope.
World of Technology: a large model railway layout, numerous vehicles, trains, steam engines, movable figures and more technical toys
Toys since 1945: Lego, Barbie, Playmobil and more current toys
The newly built kids’ area Kids on top offers a wide range of activities. Children can play there, do handicrafts, play table-top football, experiment with various construction sets or read children’s books.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karlstraße (Nuremberg).

References

  1. "Address / Directions". Retrieved 2016-02-06.

Coordinates: 49°27′17″N 11°04′28″E / 49.45472°N 11.07444°E / 49.45472; 11.07444

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