Munich Escorts
Escorts in Munich

- Sylvia
- Munich
Escorts available to travel to Munich
Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Munich.

- Angelique
- Brussels

- Roxanne
- Brussels

- Eve
- Brussels

- Kenza
- Brussels

- Sharon
- Milan

- Natalie
- Vienna

- Sharlotte
- Rome

- Grace
- Vienna

- Jane
- London

- Jessica
- London

- Johanna
- Vienna

- Jess
- Brussels

- Martina
- Barcelona

- Ane
- London

- Heidi
- London

- Lina
- London

- Isabelle
- London

- Angel
- Madrid

- Christie
- Dubai

- Claire
- Vienna

- Amy
- Brussels

- Emily
- London

- Angelina
- Rome

- Valentina
- Amsterdam

- Jill
- Vienna

- Carmen
- London

- Alexandra
- Barcelona

- Pearl
- Dubai

- Katharine
- Toronto
Munich Art Galleries
- Munich has many fabulous art galleries, such as the Glyptothek, located on the famous Königsplatz, which houses a huge array of classical sculptures; the finest collection of antique sculpture in the world. The name Glyptothek comes from the Greek word ‘glypte’ meaning ‘carved stone’, and the spectacular Neo-Classical design of the building mirrors magnificently the collection contained within. Star sights include Peace, a Roman copy of a sculpture by Cephisodotus, Archaic figures from the Temple of Aphaia on Aegina from 500 BCE, the Barberini Faun from 220 BCE and the Rondanini Alexander from 338 BCE.
The huge Alte Pinakothek (Old Art Gallery), located on Barerstraße and opened in 1836, is a centre of excellence for German Renaissance art, and one of the most famous art galleries in the world. The gallery also holds fantastic collections of Netherlandish, Flemish, Dutch, Italian, Spanish and French painting. Key pieces include the controversial depiction of Christ’s sacrifice, The Deposition by art heavyweight Rembrandt, and Botticelli’s archetypal bold use of colour in Pietà. Other major highlights are the famous Adoration of the Magi by Hans Holbein the Elder, Susanna and the Elders by Albrecht Altdorfer and The Battle of Issus, depicting the triumph of Alexander the Great over the Persian, by the same artist.
The Galerie im Lenbachhaus, located on Luisenstraße is the site of the former residence of portraitist Franz von Lenbach done in typical Italian Renaissance villa style, with Baroque overtones. In 1924 the city bought the house to use as a gallery, and a north wing was added to the existing building. Munich artists’ work is displayed here ranging from the Gothic to Art Nouveau periods, including a great emphasis on the 19th and 20th centuries with works by Karl Spitzweg, Wilhelm Leibl and Lovis Corinth. Paintings of the fampus Blaue Reiter group are also on display, as are works by Wassily Kandinsky, Andy Warhol and Paul Klee.
The Neue Pinakothek (New Art Gallery) located on Barerstraße, is a fantastic collection of mainly German and French paintings from the 18th and 19th centuries. Key pieces include the magnificent Breakfast in the Studio by Manet, with his spectacular use of light and shade; the personification of Italia and Germania by Overbeck, a nostaligic ode to the Renaissance period; and Seni at the Dead Body of Wallenstein by Karl Theodore von Piloty, from the famous play by Schiller. The gallery is arranged according to art movement, starting with Neo-Classicism and Early Romanticism, moving on to Realism and Late Romanticism, and then Impressionism and Post Impressionism and Symbolism and Art Nouveau.
The Pinakothek der Moderne (Modern Art Gallery), located on Barer Straße, in a huge, contemporary glass building, is one of the biggest modern art galleries in the world. Its enormous collection contains some of the finest works of the 20th and 21st centuries. All the major movements are represented from Cubism, with works by those such as Picasso and Georges Braque, to Pop Art, Minimal Art, Photorealism and the Junge Wilde movement popular in the 1980s. In the gallery there are also large collections of sculptures, drawings, jewellery, and photographs. Highlights of the gallery include the shocking sculpture, The Falling Man by Wilhelm Lehmbruck, a response to the horror of WW1; the magnificent multi-coloured Proust’s Armchair by Alessandro Mendini, one of 60 000 pieces in the gallery displaying the history of design; and art master Matisse’s spectacular Still Life with Geraniums, where the striking use of colour and lack of detail are trademarks of the artist.
The Haus der Kunst (Art House) located on Prinzregentstraße has housed a wonderful collection of modern art since the end of WW2. It began life as Nazi museum instigated by Hitler in 1937, displaying first the ‘truly German’ propaganda art, followed by a second exhibition of ‘degenerate art’. Nowadays it is a well-renowned gallery containing many representative works by major German artists of the 20th century, as well as pieces by international geniuses such as Picasso, Matisse, Mondrian and Magritte. There are many Expressionist and Abstract paintings on display here as well as a fine collection of modern sculpture.