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Mudéjar Pavilion, Museum of Arts and Popular Customs of Seville. The Museum of Arts and Popular Customs of Seville (Spanish: Museo de Artes y Costumbres Populares) is a museum in Seville, Andalusia, Spain, located in the María Luisa Park, across the Plaza de América from the Provincial Archeological Museum. The museum had 84,496 visitors in ...
Philadelphia Museum of Art Detail of Mudéjar tile work from the palace garden of Charles V in Seville. Mudejar artisans brought into the Christian kingdoms the elaborate geometric designs found in tilework, brickwork, wood carving, plasterwork, ceramics, and ornamental metals of Al-Andalus.
14th century tower of the church of San Salvador in Teruel, Spain, an example of what is known as Mudéjar art. Mudéjar [a] were Muslims who remained in Iberia in the late medieval period following the Christian reconquest.
The Plaza de España ("Spain Square", in English) is a plaza in the Parque de María Luisa (Maria Luisa Park), in Seville, Spain. It was built in 1928 for the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929 . It is a landmark example of Regionalism Architecture, mixing elements of the Baroque Revival , Renaissance Revival and Moorish Revival ( Neo-Mudéjar ...
The Antiguo Matadero de Sevilla (transl. Former Slaughterhouse of Seville) is a building located in Seville (Andalusia, Spain). It was built in 1916. It was built in 1916. It is Neo-Mudéjar style and its bricks with azulejos and flat roof tiles, make it a typical building of Sevillian regional architecture.
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The most important art collection of Seville is the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville. It was established in 1835 in the former Convent of La Merced . It holds many masterworks by Murillo , Pacheco , Zurbarán , Valdés Leal , and others masters of the Baroque Sevillian School, containing also Flemish paintings of the 15th and 16th centuries.
After the Ibero-American Exposition of 1929 in Seville, another stream of Neo-Mudéjar features appeared known as Andalusian Architectural Regionalism. The Plaza de España (Seville) [ 3 ] or the ABC newspaper headquarters (Madrid) are examples of this new style that combined traditional Andalusian architecture with Mudéjar features.