![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Your account | Today's news index | Weather | Traffic | Movies | Restaurants | Today's events | ||||||||
|
|
Sunday, September 19, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.
Visual Arts By Kate Brumback
PARIS Burnishing its reputation as a culture capital, Paris is getting a new museum an elegant elongated building near the Eiffel Tower for France's large and until now scattered collection of primitive art. The $263 million Musee du Quai Branly, which builders are racing to complete for its February 2006 opening, is President Jacques Chirac's pet project. The fan and defender of indigenous cultures is following the footsteps of other French leaders in leaving his imprint on the City of Light. Shortly after his election in 1995, Chirac asked his ministers for ideas for his legacy, and their brainstorming gave birth to the Quai Branly project, said Stephane Martin, the museum's president. Chirac said in June, when he welcomed a delegation of American Indians to his Elysee Palace, that "in these times of violence, arrogance, intolerance and fanaticism," the museum will show "France's faith in the virtues of cultural diversity and dialogue." Much of the French state's collection of nearly 300,000 pieces of indigenous non-Western art was brought back from Africa, Oceania, Asia and the Americas by colonizers and scientific research missions. It ranges from Indonesian jewelry and bows and arrows to African figurines and household items such as Mayan pottery.
The Quai Branly will combine collections currently housed at the museums of Mankind and of African and Oceanic Arts and at the Louvre, which lacks space to exhibit all its pieces. "The public French and international, and particularly the representatives of the countries of origin wants to have access to these collections," Martin said. "So we had to imagine a museum in which the collection would be much more accessible." Designed by French architect Jean Nouvel, the long fluid building is being raised on piles, with a partly wood-covered exterior that seems more in keeping with California than Paris. Nouvel designed the building to look like the elongated shadow of the Eiffel Tower, which is just a few minutes walk away. Thickets of trees Martin called it a "forest" will shield the museum from the noise of traffic on the adjacent Quai Branly that runs beside the Seine. The 107,640 square feet of exhibition space will include four separate rooms for temporary exhibitions and a main gallery for the permanent collection. Nouvel also designed Paris' Institut du Monde Arabe, with its remarkable shuttered windows that open and close like the iris of an eye depending on the amount of light outside. The building on the Left Bank, completed in 1987, was overseen by another president who left a powerful mark on Paris, socialist Francois Mitterrand. Other "grands travaux" great projects that form Mitterrand's legacy include the Grand Louvre, the Grande Arche at La Defense, the Bastille Opera House and the National Library. President Georges Pompidou, meanwhile, dreamed up the Centre Pompidou, and Valery Giscard d'Estaing left Paris the Musee d'Orsay.
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
seattletimes.com home
Home delivery
| Contact us
| Search archive
| Site map
| Low-graphic
NWclassifieds
| NWsource
| Advertising info
| The Seattle Times Company