At the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, the venue of this temporary exhibition, the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection is also on permanent display, offering visitors an overview of art history from the 13th to the late 20th century. The museum is home to works by Dürer, Raphael, Titian, Rubens, Rembrandt, Caravaggio, Manet, Renoir, Cézanne, Van Gogh, Gauguin, Kandinsky, Picasso, Hopper, Rothko and other great masters of painting.

For the first time, the museum is devoting a retrospective to a Spanish woman artist, Isabel Quintanilla (1938-2017), one of the key figures of contemporary realism.

The exhibition features around 100 works spanning the artist’s entire career and including her most important paintings and drawings. Many have never previously been seen in Spain as they are principally housed in museums and collections in Germany, a country where she was widely recognised in the 1970s and 1980s. Quintanilla lived and worked during a period in Spain when women artists lacked the status and recognition accorded to their male counterparts, an issue that she herself confronted in her public statements with the aim of defending the significance of her work and that of her female colleagues.

Isabel Quintanilla’s painting is the result of an absolute mastery of technique and of skill acquired at different art schools but above all the consequence of a lengthy and ongoing working process. She always referred to the constant struggle involved in resolving the problems posed by painting to all artists who wish to make use of it in order to experience reality in a different way.

The selection of works on display offers a fascinating survey that introduces visitors to the “world of Quintanilla”: filled with her most personal possessions, with the intimacy of the rooms and spaces in her different houses and studios and with her family and friends. This is a world in which we recognise settings and objects that trigger our emotions, which was one of the artist’s constant aims. As Quintanilla herself said on numerous occasions, painting was her life and her life was painting.

Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza

Hours*

Isabel Quintanilla's intimate realism

Monday: closed.
From Tuesday to Friday and Sunday: 10.00 - 19.00
Saturday: 10.00 - 23.00*

Approximate duration of the visit: 1 hour. Please note that the galleries will be emptied 5 minutes before closing time.


Permanent collection

  • Mondays from 12.00 to 16.00 (free entry)
  • Tuesday to Sunday 10.00 to 19.00

  • 1 May, Museum closed.
     

Address

  • Paseo del Prado, 8. 28014 Madrid
  • @email

Fees*

  • General: €13.00
  • Reduced: €9.00
  • Group visit (+ 6 persons): €11.00

  • *Saturdays from 21.00 to 23.00 free access for all public thanks to the collaboration of Uniqlo.
  • Check fees and combined tickets

Visitor call center

* For information and conditions of reduced-rate tickets and free entry to the museum, and special opening dates/times, visit museothyssen.org.