The family moved to the Czapski Palace (then called the Krasiński Palace) from a Warsaw University building, across the street, in June 1827, just a few weeks after the death of Frédéric's youngest sister, Emilia. Her death was the reason for the move, as it was emotionally difficult for the family to remain in the apartment that had witnessed her decline and death.
The new apartment comprised two levels. The family lived in a large second-floor flat, and the garret served as a boarding house for male students. The latter was run by Frédéric's father, Nicolas Chopin. In a letter to his friend Tytus Wojciechowski dated 27 December 1828, Frédéric mentioned that one of the former boarding-school rooms had been turned into a study for him.[1] It contained only a desk and piano; it has not been reconstructed.
On 2 November 1930 a commemorative plaque was unveiled between the windows of the annex second floor (viewed from the Krakowskie Przedmieście side).[3] The inscription in Polish reads:
Frédéric Chopin lived and composed in this house before he left Warsaw forever in 1830.
The Czapski Palace was destroyed during World War II and reconstructed in 1948-59.
The small museum occupied just one room on the second floor of the building that housed the Graphics Department of the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. The interior was designed by Barbara Brukalska, based on an 1832 drawing by Antoni Kolberg.[4] None of the apartment's original furnishings have survived.
The exhibition included:
a piano, built in the first half of the 19th century in Warsaw by Fryderyk Buchholtz, which belonged to Franz Liszt;
an Empire secretary desk built circa 1810-20 (from the collection of Krystyna Gołębiewska, great-great-granddaughter of Frédéric Chopin's sister, Ludwika Jedrzejewicz; and
an Empire-style round birch table, set of chairs, sofa, and gold-framed mirror.
There were copies of portraits of members of the Chopin family, as well as two caricatures drawn by Chopin, and pictures of 19th-century Warsaw. There is also a fireplace.
The museum was opened in February 1960, during Chopin Year celebrations. It was closed by the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts in 2014.
^Ciepłowski, Stanisław (1987). Napisy pamiątkowe w Warszawie XVII-XX w. (in Polish). Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe. p. 103. ISBN83-01-06109-X.
^Mieleszko, Jadwiga (1971). Pałac Czapskich (in Polish). Warszawa: Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe. p. 72.