Most of the items in the museum date back to its original collection. The museum was founded as a section of the Museum of Fine Arts, and the largest and most significant portion of the collection came from that museum. Particularly notable are the Aguiar collection of
costumbrista paintings; the Soria collection of Oriental
porcelain and
ivory; and some pieces from the Orleans and Gestoso collections. Other pieces have been donated by other museums, such as a collection of Sevillian
azulejos (glazed tiles) donated by the
Archeological Museum of Seville, and other donations from the
Museo del Pueblo Español (Madrid), the
Museum of Fine Arts Valencia, and from various smaller museums in Andalusia. Various people of Seville have also made important donations, filling gaps in the collections; for example, they have donated textiles, agricultural tools, household utensils, and musical instruments. Other pieces were purchased in the 1970s, when the museum came under the aegis of the Ministry of Education and Science. The largest donation after the founding was the 1979 Díaz Velázquez legacy, one of Europe's best collections of embroidery and lace, with nearly 6,000 pieces. Acquisitions since 2000 include the Loty collection of more than 2,000 glass panels depicting details Andalusian cities and life from roughly 1900 to 1936, and the 168-piece Allepuz ethnographic collection. The collection of Andalusian popular ceramics has developed over time, and is rivaled only be the collection at the
Museum of Ethnology, Hamburg. The city donated the originals of the posters for the annual
Seville Fair (
Feria de Abril). The Department of Culture supplemented this with the Mencos collection in the museum, the most complete known collection of
lithographs and color photographs of
Feria and
Semana Santa (
Holy Week in Seville) posters. Other acquisitions were the outgrowth of fieldwork: the research of Carmen Ortiz led to the donation of the cooperage workshop of Claudio Bernal, the city's last
cooper; Andrés Carretero's work similarly led to the donation of the workshop of
guitarmaker Francisco Barba; Esther Fernández work added a
gilding workshop; other workshops donated included those of Filigrana, master maker of
castanets, and of
goldsmith Fernando Marmolejo. Marmolejo was the last in a four-centuries-old family profession, and some of his tools dated back centuries. The museum now has eight workshops on exhibit. ==Use as a film set==