It took round 4 centuries, beginning within the 1540s, for Dresden’s Royal Palace, the Residenzschloss, to attain its monumental fusion of Renaissance and Baroque types. Then, on the evening of 13 February 1945, huge Allied bombing lowered it to a burnt-out shell. A perennial spoil for a lot of the historical past of the German Democratic Republic, the palace didn’t formally start its post-war reconstruction till 1985. After a interval of sluggish however essential progress within the ultimate years of communist rule, after which extra assuredly within the years following German reunification, the €400m challenge nears its completion, beginning this autumn.
A primary exhibition venue of the Staatliche Kunstsammlung Dresden (SKD), the Saxon palace now homes a few of Germany’s most prestigious collections, together with the jewels and valuable objects of the Grünes Gewölbe; works on paper within the Kupferstich-Kabinett; and the ceremonial armour, firearms and ornate driving gear of the Rüstkammer, a number one trove of its variety.
Phased completion
The “ultimate spurt”—because the Free State of Saxony calls this final section—is getting underway this month, with a brand new set up within the palace’s one-time image galleries. Then in November work is because of end up within the rebuilt Schlosskapelle, the palace’s unique Protestant chapel, adopted in early 2026 with the inauguration of an elaborate Rüstkammer set up within the rebuilt ballroom and grand session chamber. In 2027 the Grosser Schlosshof, the complicated’s elaborately embellished major courtyard, might be prepared after some three many years of labor, and at last a brand new exhibit within the floor ground’s Gothic Corridor, the oldest a part of the complicated, will chronicle the historical past of the palace itself.
The frilly ceiling of the rebuilt Schlosskapelle (palace chapel) of the Residenzschloss
Picture David Brandt, © SKD
The Residenzschloss has gone by means of a number of incarnations, from fortified fortress to Baroque showpiece, reflecting the fortunes of the Home of Wettin, the prince-electors, later kings, of Saxony. However this latest model is arguably rooted in an neglected facet of East Germany’s communist period: a wellspring of Saxon patriotism that marked its ultimate many years. This not solely saved the palace remnants from demolition—a destiny that befell the Hohenzollern metropolis palace in East Berlin—however resulted in an formidable aim to expertly revive notable parts all however invisible for hundreds of years.
The Grosser Schlosshof’s graffito ornament and balcony frescoes date to the Sixteenth century however have been broken in an early 18th-century fireplace. When planning started within the Eighties, it was determined to convey all of them again, despite the fact that there have been solely scant traces by the early twentieth century. The Sixteenth-century chapel, as soon as a centre of Lutheranism, fell into disuse after the Wettins transformed to Catholicism within the late seventeenth century; by the mid 18th century, it had been damaged up and remodeled, set to change into every part from cupboard space to places of work. Now, restorers have introduced again the unique vaulted ceiling, with only some surviving depictions, like a 1670s copperplate print, to information them. Holger Krause, an engineer with the Saxon authorities entity overseeing the palace challenge, likes to emphasize that he’s not engaged on a reconstruction however an interpretive “restaging” of what was there earlier than the warfare.

Ornate 18th-century sleigh trappings attributable to go on view in early 2026
Picture: Hans-Peter Klut, © SKD
The SKD’s holdings are indelibly marked by the fanciful Baroque sensibility of Augustus the Sturdy (1670-1733), the Saxon Elector turned Polish king, whose costumed festivals, numerous processions, and elaborate ornaments turned the premise of a number of collections. For the SKD’s normal director Bernd Ebert, the German artwork historian who arrived from Munich this spring to steward this ultimate section of palace installations, parts just like the recovered courtyard decorations and new chapel ceiling are literally in step with Dresden’s personal court docket traditions. “In a approach, they’re fantasies,” he concedes, however Dresden’s cultural status “began out as a fantasy”.
Uncommon animal trappings
The ultimate spurt is facilitating a brand new spherical of conservation remedies and rediscoveries. This month’s unveiling of the reinstalled image galleries will spotlight seldom-seen Baroque-era trappings for animals, together with a Rüstkammer gilded canine collar, a blingy mid-18th-century bauble that might double nowadays as an expensive human choker. An set up referred to as Masks and Crowns, deliberate for early 2026 and recalling the Saxon electors’ proclivity for gaudy festivals, will show wonderful sleigh gear made for a horse. Marked by a crimson velvet overlaying stitched with gold and silver wire, that gear can also be, it seems, a sort of musical instrument. Utilized in a winter procession on the event of the 1719 betrothal of Augustus the Sturdy’s son to the daughter of the Holy Roman Emperor, it’s present process a therapy that has revealed its 400-odd bells can play a number of completely different notes.
Down within the palace’s Grünes Gewölbe—nonetheless recovering items from a headline-grabbing 2019 theft—conservators have realized that its Baroque silver objects have been as soon as usually coated up with paint, and analysis into objects comprising semi-precious stones has resulted in quite a few re-categorisations, following examinations by scientists from Saxony’s Freiberg College of Mining and Expertise. Whereas again up within the Propositionssaal, the chamber being readied for Masks and Crowns, restorers are reinstalling the room’s unique Nineteenth-century gilded-brass chandeliers, salvaged from the rubble after the warfare and attributable to be proven for the primary time since.

A 1952 view of Dresden’s historic centre, nonetheless in ruins following Allied bombing in 1945
© Deutsche Fotothek/Landesbildstelle Sachsen
The completion of the Residenzschloss additionally appears like a ultimate chapter within the rebuilding of the town’s historic centre, which was almost obliterated within the warfare. A matter of many years in the past, the 15-minute stroll from the Zwinger, Augustus the Sturdy’s Baroque complicated displaying the SKD’s porcelain assortment, previous the palace and on to the Albertinum, a Nineteenth-century museum now housing Romantic and Fashionable artwork, would have been a visit by means of a wasteland. Now, almost the entire of the city material has been stuffed in.
Marius Winzeler, the Swiss artwork historian who took over the directorship of the Grünes Gewölbe and Rüstkammer in 2021, first visited Dresden as a youngster within the Eighties. “I used to be so fascinated by the destroyed metropolis,” he remembers, “as a result of every part in Switzerland is so good.” However that model of Dresden has been consigned to historical past. “It’s a brand new metropolis,” he says, including, “A brand new previous metropolis.”