The Kunstgewerbemuseum is a Berlin museum dedicated to applied arts. The Museum preserves a splendid collection dedicated to decorative arts and furnishings dating from the Middle Ages to today. The Kunstgewerbemuseum consists of two locations: the main one, housed in a building built between 1978 and 1984, and a second one, inaugurated in 2004 and housed in the 18th century palace of Köpenick. The museum's collection includes various objects, such as ceramics, furniture, goldsmiths, glass, silver, objects of domestic use and Renaissance majolica, decorations and tableware from the Rococo, from classicism to historicism and Art Nouveau and finally objects of modern design . The variety of works exhibited includes real treasures, such as the baptismal font of Frederick Barbarossa, or concrete examples of the mastery of the ancient goldsmiths and silversmiths, or the so-called treasure of the Guelphs (Welfenschatz), which include several ancient relics of San Lorenzo and San Bartholomew.