Just gone fest­iv­alling

Nyári szünet miatt az intézmény 2025. július 28. és augusztus 18. között zárva tart, ebben az időszakban az épület látogatása szünetel, a kiállításaink nem elérhetőek és személyes jegyvásárlásra sincsen lehetőség. A Házban működő Vigadó Bisztró is zárva lesz – a látogatók sem kávézni, sem ebédelni nem tudnak majd a megszokott helyszínen. 

Craft_ME is be­ing in­tro­duced through Folk_ME

Craft_ME (Craft Media & Education) is an innovative digital platform focused on teaching and preserving folk crafts. Its primary goal is to make the entire process of traditional craft techniques and trades—from the initial preparation of materials to the completion of the finished object—visually accessible to a wide range of people interested in the profession, using digital tools. 

Folk_ME has been in­tro­duced in Qatar

Hungarian Heritage House’s digital music education program, which garnered interest from several countries, opening up new opportunities for collaboration.

Folk Fash­ion - In­tro­duc­tion

The dialogue between folk attires, bourgeois fashion, and high-quality dressmaking is rarely discussed, as they seem to be contradictory phenomena. Traditional folk costumes come about as the product of a community or the individual influence of unknown creators. They are tied to a single region and symbolise permanence.

Muskátli and Fürge Uj­jak

Two magazines for needlework

In the early thirties, in the poor economic situation caused by the global crisis, it became increasingly difficult to travel abroad and acquire fashionable clothes. Consequently, more and more of the customers turned to cheaper domestic seamstresses and ready-made garments. Thus, the Hungarian Dress Movement was launched at that time.

The Tra­di­tion­al Folk At­tire as a Sign

Folk attires used to play an essential role in social contact. In peasant culture, it was a vital communication code that indicated belonging to a community, but it also referred to the socio-economic status of the individual, their ethnicity, religious affiliation, occupation or even age. It reflected the significance of the event when it was worn (religious festivities, extraordinary family events, etc.) and its emotional characteristics (grief, joy). The ceremonial dresses differed according to the festive occasion held in the village.

Folk Fash­ion of the Dance House Move­ment

The  Fly, Peacock Competition held in 1969-70 and the Dance House Movement starting in 1972 created a national trend both in interior design and fashion. One of the most important cult places was Kassák Club. In addition to certain types of blouses and shirts available in folk art stores, folk-inspired clothing also appeared in the state-owned department stores. It became fashionable to use homespun, woven, and blue-dye fabric for clothing and home textiles. 

Folk Art and Sports

The emergence and rise of modern exercise culture in the late 19th and early 20th centuries brought about changes that liberated society's standard view on women's bodies, behaviour, and duties from the "captivity" of the norms imposed by men. Modern physical culture, originating in Victorian England, made regular exercise popular among women, and the active woman paying attention to herself quickly became the epitome of civic virtue.

"Mo­tif hon­grois" - the Hun­gari­an mo­tif abroad

Along with Paul Poiret and Elsa Schiaparelli, who "moved" to the Ethnographic Museum for two weeks in 1935 to examine Matyó pattern drawings, many fashion designers of the era came to Hungary to gain inspiration and study Hungarian folk motifs. Edward Molyneux, Robert Piguet and the American fashion designer Main Rousseau Bocher, also known as Mainbocher, did not leave out the "motif hongrois”-the Hungarian motive from his designs.

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