The Schackgalerie is a Munich art gallery. The museum preserves the collection of Count Adolf Friedrich von Schack, an art lover who donated the collection to the emperor on his death, on condition that it be turned into a museum. The museum is divided into 17 rooms which house a collection of German authors mostly belonging to the late-romantic period. More than 270 paintings in the collection include works by Moritz von Schwind, Arnold Böcklin, Anselm Feuerbach, Karl Spitzweg, Franz von Lenbach and Hans von Marées. Many of the works belong to the landscape genre, with Mediterranean landscapes from countries such as Italy, Greece and Spain, which Count Schack knew well from his long travels. In addition to the works of German artists of the time, the Graf Schack collected copies of masterpieces of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, especially by Venetian artists, from Giorgione and Tizian to Tintoretto and Veronese. The Schack Collection is not only an important testimony of art collecting in Germany, but it is also a unique museum of late Romanticism, offering visitors an overview of the images of this era so important for Germany and Europe, that with its ideology has invested travel, literature, myths and ideals.