The Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg is a Hamburg museum dedicated to applied arts, one of the most important in Germany of its kind. Opened in 1877, the museum is located in a neo-baroque-style building near Hamburg's central railway station. The vast collection includes around 500,000 artistic artifacts from different European, Islamic and Asian cultures, from the ancient era to the contemporary age. In addition to artistic artifacts, the museum's collection also includes design objects and photographic, fashion and graphic collections. The collection of ancient art includes ancient oriental, Egyptian, Greek, Etruscan and Roman objects: the oldest of these is a ceramic cup from Anatolia, dating back to about 7000 years ago. Among the most famous works in the collection there is also the "Great Wave of Kanagawa", by the Japanese painter Hokusai, one of the most famous woodblock prints in the world of which various copies are preserved in various museums. The museum also organizes regular temporary exhibitions.