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Museum Angewandte Kunst

The Museum Angewandte Kunst (MAK) is located in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, and is part of the Museumsufer.[2] The alternating exhibitions recount tales of cultural values and changing living conditions. Beyond that, they continually refer to the question of what applied art is today and can be and demonstrate the field of tension between function and aesthetic value.

Museum Angewandte Kunst
Museum Angewandte Kunst and Villa Metzler in 2010
Established25 April 1985; 38 years ago (1985-04-25)
LocationMuseumsufer, Frankfurt, Germany
Coordinates50°06′23″N 8°40′53″E / 50.10639°N 8.68139°E / 50.10639; 8.68139
TypeMuseum
Collections
  • European handicrafts
  • Islamic and East Asian art
Collection size60,000
Visitors154,546 (2018)[1]
ArchitectRichard Meier
Websitewww.museumangewandtekunst.de

The Collection edit

The collections consist of more than 60,000 objects of European handicrafts dating from the twelfth to the twenty-first centuries, design, book art and graphics, and Islamic and East Asian art.

The concept edit

Against the background of its collections of outstanding works of applied art, the Museum Angewandte Kunst strives to shed light on the obscure and create relationships between the events and stories revolving around things of the concluded past, the emerging present, and the imminent future. The changing exhibitions tell of cultural values and evolving life circumstances given shape and expression with new forms. With its new presentation formats, the Museum Angewandte Kunst distances itself from the traditional criteria for museological collection and organization dating from the nineteenth century. The approach to the museum's exhibits solely from the perspective of their history has made way for the negotiation of timely and untimely reflections. This leads in turn to the emergence of issues encountered in thematic exhibitions with ever new object constellations. The presentation Elementary Parts: From the Collections opened in 2014 is a core component of this endeavor. For this "heart chamber of the museum", objects are selected from the many areas of the collection, regions of the world, and eras of the past, and placed side by side in all their dissimilarity. In this way the Museum Angewandte Kunst shows its potential and exposes both the history of its holdings and the point of departure for curatorial praxis.

Architecture edit

The architecture housing the Museum Angewandte Kunst was designed by Richard Meier.[3][4] By integrating the Neoclassicist Metzler family villa built in the nineteenth century, he created an ensemble consisting of the surrounding park, the villa, and the new building. Its re-opening was in April 2013. The purpose of the restoration was to retain the original Meier architecture.

The Building edit

The Museum Angewandte Kunst building evokes Le Corbusier's residential houses. For stylistic orientation, the architect Richard Meier looks to Classical Modern architecture with its straightforward forms and clearly articulated spatial bodies. In the late 1960s, Richard Meier belonged to the "New York Five" architects' group, who further developed the functional style of 1920s and 1930s European modernism in the tradition of the early Le Corbusier. Their common attribute is the color white. In his design for the Museum Angewandte Kunst, Meier integrated the neoclassicist Metzler family villa (in existence since the nineteenth century) and thus created an ensemble consisting of the surrounding park, the villa, and the new building.

The museum was dedicated on 25 April 1985 after a three-year construction period. The new building is an L-shaped complex composed of three cubes literally surrounding the Villa Metzler and joining it to form a square. The villa provided the basis for the dimensions of the three cubes. At the center of the four cubes is an inner courtyard from which the museum entrance is accessed. In the building's interior, a pedestrian ramp connects the light-flooded exhibition levels. The large windows generously link the interior with the museum's surroundings.

Since the spring of 2013, following a structural alteration phase in which older partitions and structural additions of the 1990s were removed, visitors have once again had the opportunity to experience the original Richard Meier architecture: light-flooded spaces, interlocking generously and granting a view of the park and river.

Metzler Park edit

The museum park connects the Museum Angewandte Kunst with the Museum der Weltkulturen, while also serving as a "passageway" to the Main for the residents of the Sachsenhausen district. It ends in the east at a gate through the boundary wall opening onto Schifferstrasse; from there, one can look along the entire length of the axis. The park, which was likewise taken into consideration in the Richard Meier design, had already long enjoyed a special reputation on account of its rare trees and plants. Its origins can be traced back to the activities of the apothecary Peter Salzwedel, who purchased the property in 1800. He planted ginkgoes, northern red oaks, a tulip tree, a giant redwood, common beech trees, and chestnut trees in the approximately 10,000-square-metre area. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is said to have been familiar with the garden, even though he already lived in Weimar, and to have praised it highly. In 1815 he dedicated his poem Ginkgo Biloba to his inamorata Marianne von Willemer of Frankfurt—with a leaf from the Salzwedel ginkgo. Georg Friedrich Metzler, a member of the famous bankers' family and the brother of Wilhelm Peter, purchased the grounds and the villa in 1851. In 1855 he had a garden house built in the park, the so-called Schweizer Haus, where concerts and plays were performed. The garden itself was re-landscaped as a rose garden.

The Historic Villa Metzler edit

 
Villa Metzler and Metzler Parc

The present-day Historic Villa Metzler was built in 1804 for the apothecary Peter Salzwedel as a summer house located on the outskirts of the town. On a square ground plan, a structure rises up three storeys, exhibiting five window axes on each side and a classical sense of balance. The pyramid-shaped mansard roof lent the house the character of the classical French style developed in the Directoire and early imperial periods on the Seine and Oise. Less than fifty years later, the banker Georg Friedrich Metzler purchased the villa, which he expanded and altered. In 1928 a home for the elderly took possession the facility, using it primarily for bedrooms. In the early 1960s, the city of Frankfurt acquired the building. Finally, in 1967, the Museum für Kunsthandwerk, founded with support from the Adolf and Luisa Haeuser Foundation, moved in. The present-day Museum für Angewandte Kunst has its origins in this institution. When it came time to expand the museum's facilities, the villa served the American architect Richard Meier as a module in the design of the overall concept for the new construction. The latter, completed in 1987, is thus a modern response to the existing structure, in which Meier transformed the ground plan and residential character into an independent museum architecture. The villa's funding has a multifaceted foundation, for not only the city of Frankfurt but also the "Gemeinnützige Gesellschaft Historische Villa" founded by the Kunstgewerbeverein (society of friends of the museum) contributed to this funding, the latter in a very special way. As a result, the villa will not only serve in Frankfurt's future as a setting for cultivated gatherings, but also bear witness to a generous sense of civic pride. The Historic Villa Metzler has been shining in new splendor since 2009. Nine style rooms allow visitors to experience historical domestic culture from the Baroque to Art Nouveau with all their senses. With the aid of paintings and old photographs, furniture, porcelain, carpets, and accessories were selected from among the museum's rich holdings to create various domestic ensembles that convey impressions of the one-time interior design tastes of the aristocracy and wealthy bourgeoisie.

Exhibitions edit

  • 2013: Korea Power
  • 2013: Bursting with Life
  • 2013: Outer Dark. Continuing after Fashion
  • 2013: Alex Wollner. Brasil Design Visual
  • 2013: Depot Show: Eating and Drinking – About Soup
  • 2013: 1607. From the Early Days of Globalization
  • since 2013: Elemental Parts. From the Collection (Continuing Presentation)
  • 2014: Tokyo Art Directors Club Award 2013
  • 2014: Depot Show: Product and Society – White
  • 2014: The Kramer Principle. Design for Variable Use
  • 2014: The Weather Diaries. 3rd Nordic Fashion Biennale
  • 2014: Give Love Back. Ata Macias and Partner
  • 2014: Realms of Childhood – Dreams of Childhood
  • 2015: Buddha. 108 Encounters
  • 2015: Hamster Hipster Handy
  • 2015: RAY 2015 – Imagine Reality
  • 2015: Sense of Doubt
  • 2015: MODE BEWEGT BILD. The Fashion Film Effect
  • 2016: Depot Show: Happiness and Promise
  • 2016: TimeSpace: After "Here" by Richard McGuire

Support from the Kunstgewerbeverein am Main edit

The "Kunstgewerbeverein in Frankfurt am Main"—the society of friends of the museum—has been in existence since 1877; in 1881 it founded the present-day Museum Angewandte Kunst. At that time, under the auspices of the Polytechnische Gesellschaft, it brought together collectors, patrons, entrepreneurs, artisans, and art admirers who sought a means of benefiting society with their community spirit and their love for art. In the nineteenth century, societies and museums emerged all over Europe with the aim of assembling works of applied art from all eras and corners of the earth as a basis for studying the history of art and culture and providing inspiration to artisans and industrial designers. Today, with its two subsidiaries and approximately six hundred members, the society provides material and non-material support to the Museum Angewandte Kunst.

Museumsufer edit

Museum Angewandte Kunst is part of the Museumsufer.

Museumsufer Frankfurt
 
 
 
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550yds
 
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M
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23
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17
16
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14
13
12
11
10
9
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6
5
4
3
2
1

Museums of the Museumsufer, Frankfurt am Main
South Bank
1
Hindemith Kabinett im Kuhhirtenturm (de)
2
Icon Museum (de) (Museum of Orthodox sacred Art)
3
Portikus (Exhibition hall for contemporary art)
4
Museum Angewandte Kunst (Applied Arts)
5
Museum der Weltkulturen (Ethnological Museum)
6
Deutsches Filmmuseum (de) (German Film Museum)
7
German Architecture Museum
8
Museum für Kommunikation
9
Städel (Fine Arts Museum)
10
Liebieghaus (Classical sculpture collection)
11
Museum Giersch (Art and culture of Rhine-Main)
North Bank
12
Jewish Museum Frankfurt
13
Frankfurt Archaeological Museum (de)
14
Historical Museum, Frankfurt
15
Caricatura Museum Frankfurt
16
Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt (Art exhibition venue)
17
Museum für Moderne Kunst (Modern Art Museum)
18
Frankfurter Judengasse Museum (Preserved foundations from the Ghetto)
19
Deutsches Romantik-Museum / Goethe House
External
20
Naturmuseum Senckenberg (Westend, Frankfurt)
21
Eintracht Frankfurt Museum (Waldstadion)
22
German Leather Museum (Offenbach)
23
Klingspor Museum (Offenbach)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Besucherzahlen der Frankfurter Museen 2018". Stadtkind Frankfurt - Reflexionen aus dem urbanen Leben (in German). 20 November 2019. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  2. ^ "Museum Angewandte Kunst". Museumsufer Frankfurt (in German). Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  3. ^ "Museum Angewandte Kunst". Grand Tour der Moderne (in German). Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  4. ^ "... in die Jahre gekommen: Kunstgewerbemuseum in Frankfurt am Main". db deutsche bauzeitung (in German). 1 March 2017. Retrieved 2 April 2021.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • "Museum Angewandte Kunst". Museumsufer Frankfurt. Retrieved 21 December 2022.

museum, angewandte, kunst, other, uses, museum, für, angewandte, kunst, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remo. For other uses see Museum fur angewandte Kunst disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Museum Angewandte Kunst news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Museum Angewandte Kunst MAK is located in Frankfurt am Main Germany and is part of the Museumsufer 2 The alternating exhibitions recount tales of cultural values and changing living conditions Beyond that they continually refer to the question of what applied art is today and can be and demonstrate the field of tension between function and aesthetic value Museum Angewandte KunstMuseum Angewandte Kunst and Villa Metzler in 2010Established25 April 1985 38 years ago 1985 04 25 LocationMuseumsufer Frankfurt GermanyCoordinates50 06 23 N 8 40 53 E 50 10639 N 8 68139 E 50 10639 8 68139TypeMuseumCollectionsEuropean handicraftsIslamic and East Asian artCollection size60 000Visitors154 546 2018 1 ArchitectRichard MeierWebsitewww museumangewandtekunst de Contents 1 The Collection 2 The concept 3 Architecture 3 1 The Building 3 2 Metzler Park 3 3 The Historic Villa Metzler 4 Exhibitions 5 Support from the Kunstgewerbeverein am Main 6 Museumsufer 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksThe Collection editThe collections consist of more than 60 000 objects of European handicrafts dating from the twelfth to the twenty first centuries design book art and graphics and Islamic and East Asian art The concept editAgainst the background of its collections of outstanding works of applied art the Museum Angewandte Kunst strives to shed light on the obscure and create relationships between the events and stories revolving around things of the concluded past the emerging present and the imminent future The changing exhibitions tell of cultural values and evolving life circumstances given shape and expression with new forms With its new presentation formats the Museum Angewandte Kunst distances itself from the traditional criteria for museological collection and organization dating from the nineteenth century The approach to the museum s exhibits solely from the perspective of their history has made way for the negotiation of timely and untimely reflections This leads in turn to the emergence of issues encountered in thematic exhibitions with ever new object constellations The presentation Elementary Parts From the Collections opened in 2014 is a core component of this endeavor For this heart chamber of the museum objects are selected from the many areas of the collection regions of the world and eras of the past and placed side by side in all their dissimilarity In this way the Museum Angewandte Kunst shows its potential and exposes both the history of its holdings and the point of departure for curatorial praxis Architecture editThe architecture housing the Museum Angewandte Kunst was designed by Richard Meier 3 4 By integrating the Neoclassicist Metzler family villa built in the nineteenth century he created an ensemble consisting of the surrounding park the villa and the new building Its re opening was in April 2013 The purpose of the restoration was to retain the original Meier architecture The Building edit The Museum Angewandte Kunst building evokes Le Corbusier s residential houses For stylistic orientation the architect Richard Meier looks to Classical Modern architecture with its straightforward forms and clearly articulated spatial bodies In the late 1960s Richard Meier belonged to the New York Five architects group who further developed the functional style of 1920s and 1930s European modernism in the tradition of the early Le Corbusier Their common attribute is the color white In his design for the Museum Angewandte Kunst Meier integrated the neoclassicist Metzler family villa in existence since the nineteenth century and thus created an ensemble consisting of the surrounding park the villa and the new building The museum was dedicated on 25 April 1985 after a three year construction period The new building is an L shaped complex composed of three cubes literally surrounding the Villa Metzler and joining it to form a square The villa provided the basis for the dimensions of the three cubes At the center of the four cubes is an inner courtyard from which the museum entrance is accessed In the building s interior a pedestrian ramp connects the light flooded exhibition levels The large windows generously link the interior with the museum s surroundings Since the spring of 2013 following a structural alteration phase in which older partitions and structural additions of the 1990s were removed visitors have once again had the opportunity to experience the original Richard Meier architecture light flooded spaces interlocking generously and granting a view of the park and river Metzler Park edit The museum park connects the Museum Angewandte Kunst with the Museum der Weltkulturen while also serving as a passageway to the Main for the residents of the Sachsenhausen district It ends in the east at a gate through the boundary wall opening onto Schifferstrasse from there one can look along the entire length of the axis The park which was likewise taken into consideration in the Richard Meier design had already long enjoyed a special reputation on account of its rare trees and plants Its origins can be traced back to the activities of the apothecary Peter Salzwedel who purchased the property in 1800 He planted ginkgoes northern red oaks a tulip tree a giant redwood common beech trees and chestnut trees in the approximately 10 000 square metre area Johann Wolfgang von Goethe is said to have been familiar with the garden even though he already lived in Weimar and to have praised it highly In 1815 he dedicated his poem Ginkgo Biloba to his inamorata Marianne von Willemer of Frankfurt with a leaf from the Salzwedel ginkgo Georg Friedrich Metzler a member of the famous bankers family and the brother of Wilhelm Peter purchased the grounds and the villa in 1851 In 1855 he had a garden house built in the park the so called Schweizer Haus where concerts and plays were performed The garden itself was re landscaped as a rose garden The Historic Villa Metzler edit nbsp Villa Metzler and Metzler ParcThe present day Historic Villa Metzler was built in 1804 for the apothecary Peter Salzwedel as a summer house located on the outskirts of the town On a square ground plan a structure rises up three storeys exhibiting five window axes on each side and a classical sense of balance The pyramid shaped mansard roof lent the house the character of the classical French style developed in the Directoire and early imperial periods on the Seine and Oise Less than fifty years later the banker Georg Friedrich Metzler purchased the villa which he expanded and altered In 1928 a home for the elderly took possession the facility using it primarily for bedrooms In the early 1960s the city of Frankfurt acquired the building Finally in 1967 the Museum fur Kunsthandwerk founded with support from the Adolf and Luisa Haeuser Foundation moved in The present day Museum fur Angewandte Kunst has its origins in this institution When it came time to expand the museum s facilities the villa served the American architect Richard Meier as a module in the design of the overall concept for the new construction The latter completed in 1987 is thus a modern response to the existing structure in which Meier transformed the ground plan and residential character into an independent museum architecture The villa s funding has a multifaceted foundation for not only the city of Frankfurt but also the Gemeinnutzige Gesellschaft Historische Villa founded by the Kunstgewerbeverein society of friends of the museum contributed to this funding the latter in a very special way As a result the villa will not only serve in Frankfurt s future as a setting for cultivated gatherings but also bear witness to a generous sense of civic pride The Historic Villa Metzler has been shining in new splendor since 2009 Nine style rooms allow visitors to experience historical domestic culture from the Baroque to Art Nouveau with all their senses With the aid of paintings and old photographs furniture porcelain carpets and accessories were selected from among the museum s rich holdings to create various domestic ensembles that convey impressions of the one time interior design tastes of the aristocracy and wealthy bourgeoisie Exhibitions edit2013 Korea Power 2013 Bursting with Life 2013 Outer Dark Continuing after Fashion 2013 Alex Wollner Brasil Design Visual 2013 Depot Show Eating and Drinking About Soup 2013 1607 From the Early Days of Globalization since 2013 Elemental Parts From the Collection Continuing Presentation 2014 Tokyo Art Directors Club Award 2013 2014 Depot Show Product and Society White 2014 The Kramer Principle Design for Variable Use 2014 The Weather Diaries 3rd Nordic Fashion Biennale 2014 Give Love Back Ata Macias and Partner 2014 Realms of Childhood Dreams of Childhood 2015 Buddha 108 Encounters 2015 Hamster Hipster Handy 2015 RAY 2015 Imagine Reality 2015 Sense of Doubt 2015 MODE BEWEGT BILD The Fashion Film Effect 2016 Depot Show Happiness and Promise 2016 TimeSpace After Here by Richard McGuireSupport from the Kunstgewerbeverein am Main editThe Kunstgewerbeverein in Frankfurt am Main the society of friends of the museum has been in existence since 1877 in 1881 it founded the present day Museum Angewandte Kunst At that time under the auspices of the Polytechnische Gesellschaft it brought together collectors patrons entrepreneurs artisans and art admirers who sought a means of benefiting society with their community spirit and their love for art In the nineteenth century societies and museums emerged all over Europe with the aim of assembling works of applied art from all eras and corners of the earth as a basis for studying the history of art and culture and providing inspiration to artisans and industrial designers Today with its two subsidiaries and approximately six hundred members the society provides material and non material support to the Museum Angewandte Kunst Museumsufer editMuseum Angewandte Kunst is part of the Museumsufer Museumsufer Frankfurt nbsp nbsp nbsp 500m550yds nbsp Riv e rMain23 nbsp 22 nbsp 21 nbsp 20 nbsp 19 nbsp 18 nbsp 17 nbsp 16 nbsp 15 nbsp 14 nbsp 13 nbsp 12 nbsp 11 nbsp 10 nbsp 9 nbsp 8 nbsp 7 nbsp 6 nbsp 5 nbsp 4 nbsp 3 nbsp 2 nbsp 1 nbsp viewtalkeditMuseums of the Museumsufer Frankfurt am MainSouth Bank1 Hindemith Kabinett im Kuhhirtenturm de 2 Icon Museum de Museum of Orthodox sacred Art 3 Portikus Exhibition hall for contemporary art 4 Museum Angewandte Kunst Applied Arts 5 Museum der Weltkulturen Ethnological Museum 6 Deutsches Filmmuseum de German Film Museum 7 German Architecture Museum8 Museum fur Kommunikation9 Stadel Fine Arts Museum 10 Liebieghaus Classical sculpture collection 11 Museum Giersch Art and culture of Rhine Main North Bank12 Jewish Museum Frankfurt13 Frankfurt Archaeological Museum de 14 Historical Museum Frankfurt15 Caricatura Museum Frankfurt16 Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt Art exhibition venue 17 Museum fur Moderne Kunst Modern Art Museum 18 Frankfurter Judengasse Museum Preserved foundations from the Ghetto 19 Deutsches Romantik Museum Goethe HouseExternal20 Naturmuseum Senckenberg Westend Frankfurt 21 Eintracht Frankfurt Museum Waldstadion 22 German Leather Museum Offenbach 23 Klingspor Museum Offenbach See also editMuseumsufer List of museums in Germany List of art museumsReferences edit Besucherzahlen der Frankfurter Museen 2018 Stadtkind Frankfurt Reflexionen aus dem urbanen Leben in German 20 November 2019 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Museum Angewandte Kunst Museumsufer Frankfurt in German Retrieved 2 April 2021 Museum Angewandte Kunst Grand Tour der Moderne in German Retrieved 2 April 2021 in die Jahre gekommen Kunstgewerbemuseum in Frankfurt am Main db deutsche bauzeitung in German 1 March 2017 Retrieved 2 April 2021 External links editOfficial website Museum Angewandte Kunst Museumsufer Frankfurt Retrieved 21 December 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Museum Angewandte Kunst amp oldid 1218844465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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