Like many of Dresden's notable collections, this
print room traces its origins to the
Prince-electors of Saxony. The art chamber of the
House of Wettin, established around 1560, became an independent museum of prints and drawings in 1720. The collection was expanded in the following centuries. It now describes itself as the oldest museum of graphic arts in the German-speaking world. Because most items had been evacuated to
Schloss Weesenstein in the early stages of
World War II, the collection was saved from the
bombing of Dresden in February 1945. War-time losses were still high; around 50,000 items are still missing. Most of the exhibits were
looted by the
Soviet Union after the war and did not return to Dresden until the late 1950s, and some when they were put back on display in the
Albertinum. ==Collection==