His Majesty King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands opened the renovated Museum De Lakenhal on 19 June. The Leiden museum has opened its doors to the public after being closed for more than two years. During the closure, the museum has been thoroughly restored and expanded.
The restored museum offers a rich selection from the collection of visual arts, craftwork and history, based on seven core stories. These include the premier exhibit on The Last Judgement by Lucas van Leyden, the collection on ‘The Siege and Relief of Leiden,’ and the New Leiden Cloth, which was developed by five present-day artists and designers using a combination of new techniques and Leiden’s old, traditional crafts.
Until 3 October 2019, the museum is showing leading works from the Golden Age of Leiden’s masters such as Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn, Jan van Goyen, Jan Steen and the Leiden Fijnschilders in the exhibition Rembrandt & the Dutch Golden Age.
From 3 November 2019, the museum will present the much anticipated exhibition Young Rembrandt 1624-1634, in the new exhibition wing. The exhibition is a collaboration between the Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden and The Ashmolean Museum in Oxford and is curated by Christopher Brown, the former director of the Ashmolean Museum; with Christiaan Vogelaar, curator of Museum De Lakenhal, and An Van Camp, curator of the Ashmolean Museum.