11th November st, House 23
58-580 Szklarska Poreba
phone/fax: +48 75 717 26 11
opening hours:
Mondays: closed to visitors
Tuesday – Sunday: 9.00-17.00 (May – September)
Tuesday – Sunday: 9.00-16.00 (October – April)

The branch of the Karkonosze Museum in Szklarska Poręba was opened in 1995. It is located in a stylish house, which from 1890 belonged to the brothers Carl and Gerhart Hauptmann. The charisma of those outstanding writers caused an active colony of artists to gather around their house, which after 1922 took the formal shape of the Saint Luke’s Society of Artists.
The permanent museum exhibition outlines both the characters of the villa owners and the issues of the artistic life of the town in the pre- and post-war times. It also includes a presentation of glass products that used to be made in Szklarska Poręba. Apart from the extraction of precious stones and ores, the village’s history was from the very start connected with glass manufacturing. The first glassworks, the oldest in the Sudety Mountains, was established here in the mid-14th century The development of this branch of craft in the valley of the Czech Struga was favoured by the abundance of necessary raw materials: quartz and beech wood. Their massive exploitation resulted in successive moving of the glassworks to still higher parts of the mountains. It was more profitable than transporting the raw materials and influenced the creation of a “roaming” type of workshop. Medieval plants made the so-called forest glass (vitrium silvestre) or mountain glass (vitrium montanum). It was not very transparent, which was caused by ash impurities and numerous air bubbles, and often had a greenish colour (hence the name: “green glass”).