Czére Andrea szerk.: A Szépművészeti Múzeum közleményei (Budapest, 2008)
JÚLIA TÁTRAI AND LÁSZLO LENGYEL: Archduke Albert († 1621) on the Catafalque: A Picture of Old-New Acquisition
I KAR.EL VAN MALLERY (?), CATAFALQUE OF ARCHDUKE ALBERT BUDAPEST. MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS and decorative arts were acquired through family inheritance, while the other part was made up of ethnographic objects wdiich he himself had supplemented the collection with. The capital received the bequest in 1911, and then after the "expert selection and placement of the material of museum value" the Count Jenő Zichy Museum of Budapest was opened on 23 October 1921. 4 Even though pieces from the Zichy Collection were exhibited, the majority of its masterpieces remained unknown to the public.' 1 In 1932 a decree was passed on the foundation of the Municipal Gallery. The gallery's collection was made up of four units: the Jenő