Budapest Guides You Through Lajos Tihanyi’s Bold World

Discover Lajos Tihanyi’s bold Expressionism in Budapest: guided tours, online events, and retrospectives at Szent György Square. Explore portraits, abstraction, and The Eight’s legacy. Limited spots—book tickets now.
when: 2026.02.03., Tuesday
where: 1014 Budapest, Szent György tér 2.

Lajos Tihanyi, the fearless Hungarian master of Expressionism and the avant-garde, takes over Budapest with a sweeping retrospective: nearly two hundred works, from key paintings and graphics to objects from his estate, unfold a career built on daring color and abstraction. The venue is at 1014 Budapest, Szent György Square (Szent György tér) 2, and the exhibition puts his experiments and evolution fully on view. A reminder accompanies the visuals: the photograph is under the copyright of the Museum of Fine Arts.

Rebel Forms, Daring Colors – A Life’s Work on Show

January 31, 2026, 15:00–16:00, marks the first guided tour celebrating the 140th anniversary of Tihanyi’s birth, spotlighting his most important paintings, drawings, and personal items. Losing his hearing in childhood, Tihanyi called sound into color and line, finding a singular voice in paint. Without academic training, he forged an extraordinary visual language that made him a key figure in The Eight (Nyolcak) artists’ group and one of the 20th century’s most original Hungarian painters. Join a guided visit to dive deeper into his practice and see the works up close. Entry requires a ticket to the temporary exhibition plus a tour program ticket priced at $4.10. Duration: 60 minutes. Maximum: 17 people. Meeting point: information desk. Additional dates: February 7 (11:00–12:00), February 8 (15:00–16:00), February 11 (16:00–17:00), February 12 (16:00–17:00).

“Phenomenon: That Was Lajos Tihanyi” with Art Historian Blanka Bán

January 30, 2026, 16:00–17:00. Tihanyi emerged from Budapest’s bourgeois milieu and, after a serious illness in youth, lost his hearing—yet his ambition never cracked. Without formal academic training, he built a painterly language that became freer and more experimental for precisely that reason. His vision absorbed the intellectual climates he inhabited: early color-rich attempts gave way to the naturalist lessons of Nagybánya (Baia Mare), and later stints in Paris, Vienna, Berlin, and New York reshaped his gaze. Expression, Cubist structure, and abstraction each inflect his canvases, while he remained consistently independent and enduring across phases. What career did his parents imagine for him as an adult? Why did he paint both sides of certain pictures? What was he like, according to contemporaries, and how did he capture them in portraits? How did he travel from Fauvist vibrancy to nonfigurative art? Blanka Bán’s tour lays it all bare. Full-price ticket: $20.30. Discount: $11.50. Max: 20. Meeting point: ground floor, exhibition entrance.

Explore Tihanyi Online

February 3, 2026, 19:00–20:00. Celebrate his 140th with an online tour from home, and learn more about his painting on the Day of Hungarian Culture. After the live session, you can explore the virtual space on your own for a week: zoom in on works and delve into the gallery texts. Program runs on Zoom. Fee: $4.10 per person. Max: 90. Length: 60 minutes.

Lajos Tihanyi, the Restless Charmer

February 5, 2026, 17:00–18:00. Art manager Nóra Winkler and art historian Tünde Topor co-lead. A singular life, an unconventional career, and a legacy that returned home by a winding path. As a founder of The Eight (Nyolcak), he painted a whole gallery of early 20th-century Hungarian literary and artistic luminaries with razor insight. With him, the psychological portrait marched into Hungarian painting; his portraits double as deep psychological studies. He often turned the lens on himself, and his late abstract compositions are no less compelling. What do his works and their stories say to us today? Full-price ticket: $20.30. Discount: $11.50. Max: 36. Meeting point: ground floor, exhibition entrance. Tickets available online or on-site, first come, first served. After the tour, the show remains open for independent viewing until 18:45.

Budapest–Berlin–Paris: The Road to Abstraction

February 6, 2026, 16:00–17:00. Writer and art historian Rita Halász traces how the fin-de-siècle café culture, the Berlin avant-garde, and Parisian modernism shaped Tihanyi’s style. The tour follows his journey from figurative composition to a language of pure color and form. Full-price ticket: $20.30. Discount: $11.50. Max: 20. Meeting point: ground floor, exhibition entrance. Tickets available online or on-site, first come, first served.

Dates and City

February 3, Budapest. February 5, Budapest. February 6, Budapest. February 7, Budapest. February 8, Budapest. February 11–12, Budapest. Organizers reserve the right to change dates and programs.

2025, adminboss

Pros
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Affordable add-on tours (from about $4–$20) make it easy to sample high-quality guided content without blowing the budget
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Super family-friendly for culture-loving families: short 60-minute sessions, clear meeting points, small groups, and an online option if kids get museum-fatigued
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The venue is in central Buda (Szent György Square, Castle District), a safe, scenic area with lots to do nearby (Castle, Fisherman’s Bastion), great for a half-day plan
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Multiple dates and formats (on-site and Zoom) give flexibility if you’re juggling a tight itinerary
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No Hungarian required: museum tours in Budapest commonly run in English or provide English materials; the online tour on Zoom is especially expat/tourist-friendly
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Easy to reach: Castle District is accessible by bus, funicular, or rideshare; driving/parking is possible but not needed
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Unique subject: Tihanyi and The Eight offer a fresh angle beyond the usual Impressionist blockbusters, great for travelers who’ve “done” the big-name Western canon
Cons
Tihanyi isn’t a household name in the U.S., so casual tourists may not feel an immediate draw compared to, say, a Monet or Van Gogh show
Location recognition: Budapest is well-known, but Szent György Square specifics may be unfamiliar; first-timers might need to double-check entrances in the Castle complex
Small group caps (17–36) mean tours can sell out; spontaneity suffers unless you book ahead
Compared with headline-grabbing modern-art retrospectives in Paris, London, or NYC, the production scale may feel more intimate than spectacular—but that’s also its charm

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