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Hans Hollein's Masterpiece - by Eva Branscome (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- The Austrian architect-artist Hans Hollein was appointed in 1972 to design a new museum for the post-industrial city of Mönchengladbach in West Germany which transformed it into a centre for contemporary art.
- About the Author: Eva Branscome is Professor of Architecture and Cultural Heritage at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London
- 208 Pages
- Architecture, Individual Architects & Firms
Description
Book Synopsis
The Austrian architect-artist Hans Hollein was appointed in 1972 to design a new museum for the post-industrial city of Mönchengladbach in West Germany which transformed it into a centre for contemporary art. This book reveals the full story of this innovative masterpiece. Opening in 1982, Museum Abteiberg was instantly lauded by international critics and Hollein was duly awarded the 1985 Pritzker Prize. It rapidly became a place of architectural pilgrimage, with more than 20,000 people flocking to visit in its opening week, well over a decade before Frank Gehry completed the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao.
The book provides a timely and comprehensive reappraisal of the museum from concept, through the design process to its completion. It explains that Hollein was at his core a conceptual artist, perceiving the museum as provocative land art, with an architectural collage as exterior and a labyrinthine, 'democratic' interior, designed around the collection. It features a triptych of characters - Hollein, director Johannes Cladders and artist Joseph Beuys - whose close collaboration resulted in a museum which transformed thinking about how art, architecture and context - historical, cultural and geographical - should all relate. Radical at the time, many of the ideas that they first realised in this building have now become the norm in museum practice. Broader than a simple building study, this is a story which not only connects art with architecture and with the city, but with finance, corporate power and capital investment.
Review Quotes
'Museum Abteiberg is the manifesto of a shared vision in art, architecture and society which existed in Europe in the early-1970s. Its pre-history was the programme for an "Antimuseum" that the museum's director, Johannes Cladders, had started in 1967 with Joseph Beuys and which went on to include many now world-famous artists. In her book, Eva Branscome reaches beyond architectural history into the realms of art history and social history. It is a brilliant and overdue account that also explains the great love of younger artists and architects for this remarkable building today.' - Suzanne Titz, Director Museum Abteiberg
About the Author
Eva Branscome is Professor of Architecture and Cultural Heritage at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London