Schloss Eggenberg

State Rooms

Image Credits

Anniversary exhibition

as part of SHOWING STYRIA 2025

Location

Schloss Eggenberg and State Rooms

Duration

26 April to 2 November 2025

Curatorial team Schloss Eggenberg

Head: Paul Schuster

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Ambition & Illusion

Ambition was a defining characteristic of the talented and determined first Prince Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg (1568-1634). As imperial governor of Inner Austria, the scion of a previously insignificant Styrian patrician family reached the pinnacle of an incredible career in 1625. In the same year, Hans Ulrich commissioned the construction of a new residential palace in Graz. 2025 marks the 400th anniversary of the start of construction and is the occasion for an extraordinary exhibition project.

The palace building itself harbours a great deal of ambition. Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg had a Spanish-inspired royal palace built as a political manifesto and symbolic utopia of peace and order to express his good government. His descendants also perpetuated this illusion of a golden age, although the reality was characterised by hardship and decay. To this day, the palace bears witness to the fame and honour of the Eggenberg family.

Schloss Eggenberg: Staging the world

The exhibition takes us back to the time of the Eggenbergs - a time of crisis and change full of dangers, but also full of opportunities. Their baroque palace is not a residence but a huge theatre stage. The court ceremonial takes centre stage here. Eggenberg can also be read as a grand theatre. The state rooms and the Planetary room take on their original role: they become platforms for the grand staging of a princely family that has managed to mould its failure into an eternal success story with the help of a work of art. SHOWING STYRIA at Schloss Eggenberg brings not only the family members but also the people who shaped the court before the curtain and tells of their lives. 

The multimedia exhibition is divided into three thematic sections.

It begins with a prologue that sheds light on the crises in Europe around 1600 and shows how Schloss Eggenberg was built in response to this time of upheaval. The first rooms are dedicated to Hans Ulrich von Eggenberg, his career, but also to the character and circumstances of this extraordinary statesman.

The next act tells of life at court, but also of the courtiers' power struggles behind the scenes. We also meet the Prince himself and learn more about his duties, his ambitions and his failures. This is where illusion meets reality. The large sequence of rooms on the ‘female side of the house’, the former ceremonial flat of Princess von Eggenberg, places the women who lived here centre stage: the focus is on female role models and the associated opportunities and constraints in a world dominated by men.

Another room will also help visitors to decipher the castle's enigmatic architecture and reveal the secrets behind the fascinating symbolism of the numbers. The staging of the Planetary room makes its painting decoration speak through multimedia. The palace church and sacristy display the most precious exhibits and are the highlight of the exhibition.

A combination of precious items and innovative media

The speciality of the exhibition concept lies in the combination of valuable loans and innovative media with the castle and its unique interior design. For the first time, important artefacts from the family will be shown together again in the castle. Archives and collections in Austria, Germany, Italy, and the Czech Republic provide valuable originals and unique works of art. This exhibition would not be possible without the generous help and support of national and international lenders.

Sounds of Eggenberg

Precious music prints from Roman libraries that have never been exhibited before are coming to Graz. Pieces of music also play an important role in the exhibition as immaterial exhibits. The artists' collective ĀRT HOUSE has rediscovered, reworked and recorded these “Sounds of Eggenberg”, including works by Heinrich Schütz, Ignaz Franz Biber, Stefano Landi, Antonio Draghi, Pierre Gaultier, and Johann Jacob Prinner.

As a cooperation partner, the Styriarte will be presenting music from the world of the Eggenbergs in several programmes in 2025.

All content and media will also be available online independently of the exhibition visit.

Image Credits

Paul Schuster

Head of Schloss Eggenberg & Alte Galerie

With an innovative exhibition concept for a baroque palace, we are breaking new ground for the visitor experience in a historic building. The speciality lies in the combination of valuable international loans and various media with the palace itself and its unique State Rooms. 2025 will surprise everyone, even those who know Eggenberg. We will also bring the world of the Eggenbergs to life. Outstanding works of music history have been dedicated to the Princes of Eggenberg. The artist collective ĀRT HOUSE has rediscovered these ‘Sounds of Eggenberg’ and recorded them for the exhibition. As a cooperation partner, the Styriarte 2025 presents music from the world of the Eggenbergs in several programmes.