|
|
Charleroi Photography Museum Belgium, Wallonia-Brussels, Architecture, Image
Charleroi Museum of Photography : Architecture
Belgian Building by lEscaut Architecture, Europe
Charleroi Museum of Photography Extension, Mont-sur-Marchienne, Belgium
2008
lEscaut Architecture
€3.6m
Word of introduction
Press release
Practical information
The 3 exhibition focuses
Focus on the new hanging : photography in the 19th century
Focus on the new hanging : photography in the 20th century
Architectural point of view
lEscaut Architecture
Jeanine Cohen
Jean-Paul Hubin, instant portraits
Vidéographie
INTRODUCTION
Charleroi Museum of Photography, cornerstone of the architectural
policy of the Ministry of the Frenck-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels
Architecture, as a reflection of lifestyle and identity, is characterised
by its constant presence in the everyday life of each citizen. It
is enshrined in history and constitutes our common cultural heritage.
In this respect, it affects us all and forms a mode of artistic expression
that should be recognised as such. But if architecture is undoubtedly
the result of an act of creation driven by a designer, it is primarily
generated on demand. The owner is thus seen as a founder, in consultation
with users present and future. He must define, in addition to any
requirements or programmes, the meaning and values he intends to convey
through the emergence of a building. Architecture can no longer be
considered a mere commodity but must be recognised as an artistic
and intellectual contribution to a project. A project which demonstrates
a strong sense of purpose to live, work, entertain, educate, discover,
assemble, administrate etc., while interacting with its natural, built
and social environment and exhibiting a determined modernity. The
Charleroi Museum of Photography is implementing a perfect example
of such a citizen-driven project, working with the Museum Directors,
the local population and the Commune of Charleroi to reflect on development
of the area around the site.
Owners and public sponsors in particular are urged to recognise the
cultural and personal values inherent to the act of building. Our
actions and cultural policies must reflect education and respect for
a quality built environment. Philosopher to our architectural policy
is the MAC (Musée des Arts Contemporains du Grand-Hornu
Grand-Hornu Museum of Contemporary Arts) while our guide is undoubtedly
the Service des Infrastructures Culturelles [Cultural Infrastructure
Service], which manages 55 sites in Belgium and abroad (cinemas, cultural
centres, libraries
and the Charleroi Museum of Photography).
Through the publication of a collection of books entitled Visions.
Architectures Publiques [Visions. Public architecture], one
of which will feature the Museum and all of which will be translated
into English, through the European Forum for Architectural Policies,
where it plays an active role, and through the establishment of the
Cellule Architecture [Architecture Group] (2007), the Minsitry of
the French-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels intends to develop
an architectural policy of the highest possibly quality.
Jacques Lange,
Architect, Directeur des Infrastructures culturelles [Director of
Cultural Infrastructure],
Chantal Dassonville,
Architect, Directrice générale adjointe f.f. [Assistant
Director General]
Direction générale de lInfrastructure [Directorate
General for Infrastructure]
Minsitry of the French-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels
In addition to the Charleroi Museum of Photography, the Minsitry of
the French-speaking Community is also opening another building emblematic
of its architectural policy the Cinéma Sauvenière
in Liège (Vers plus de bien-être architects, www.vplus.org).
Interested journalists should contact Thomas Moor, Cellule Architecture
[Architecture Group] on: thomas.moor@cfwb.be, +32-2-413 40 96, +32-473-540-388.
PRESS RELEASE
2008 - the Belgian Museum of Photography is expanding
After its renovation in 1995, the Museum of Photography in Charleroi
(Belgium) is preparing to experience a new evolution through the opening
on 1 June 2008 of a new wing adjoining the Carmelite convent, cofinanced
by the French-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels and the European
Union ERDF funds. The museum will become the largest and one of the
most important museums of photography in Europe (8000 m2), with a
collection of 80,000 photographs, more than 800 of them on permanent
exhibition, and the conservation of three million negatives. Designed
by lEscaut Architecture, this contemporary wing greatly extends
the exhibition area (from 1550 m² to 2200 m²) and allows
visitors to have access to a new library, a projection room, a boutique
and a Museum Café opening onto an enormous park.
In spite of the significant development that it benefited from ten
years ago to adapt better to its new function, the former Carmelite
convent of Mont-sur-Marchienne offered too little space to allow the
Museum of Photography to increase its influence and to respond to
new needs concerning exhibitions, programming, management and educational
tools. Financed by European funds and by the French-speaking Community
of Wallonia-Brussels, the new contemporary wing of the museum will
see the light of day on 1 June.
These new exhibition halls will offer a new scale to the presentation
of the permanent collections, making it possible to go more deeply
into the history of photography and doubling the area of picture rails
devoted to the leading pieces of the collection. The educational service
will benefit from an enormous room facing the park, equipped for digital
studios and in direct connection with the Discovery Path developed
in the south wing of the former Carmelite convent. In the park, a
new library (its former location will become a shop), an auditorium
that will enable the presentation of multimedia works and The
Museum Café will welcome the public independently of
access to the exhibition. In the underground levels and on the second
floor the technical rooms, photography laboratory, joinery and cutting
workshops, storage areas for works and materials will all be located.
The temporary exhibitions will be presented in the halls of the former
Carmelite convent at the rate of three simultaneous exhibitions every
four months.
The new building is the result of a long process of maturation that
started at the beginning of the 1990s with Georges and Jeanne Vercheval
and was supported jointly by Olivier Bastin and Eloisa Astudillo (lEscaut
Architecture), Xavier Canonne, director of the museum, and the Department
of cultural infrastructure of the French-speaking Community.
Established in the park of the former Carmelite convent, the new wing
will redistribute the functions both in the interior (programming)
and in the exterior of the museum (the park will become public and
will connect the adjoining public facilities) within a vision that
encompasses the neighbourhood and spreads to the adjoining public
areas. Designed in successive hollows, the new building combines the
framing and view of the park and surrounding areas which consequently
will become focal points or backgrounds for the spatial staging. The
museography will take over this external experimentation and reproduce
it in the form of multiple views.
The specific nature of this audacious construction is expressed primarily
by two elements: its wooden structure (the techniques used are a first
in Europe) and its envelope of aluminium, created by the Belgian artist
Jeanine Cohen. This envelope will offer both a depth and a vibration,
changing according to the light and the time of day. The building
is in a permanent photo composition.
Thanks to these new tools for preservation, accommodation and development,
the Museum of Photography of Charleroi (centre of contemporary art
of the French-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels) is consolidating
its anchoring and its influence both on the local and on the national
and above all international level, because it will become the most
enormous and one of the most important museums exclusively devoted
to photography in Europe.
Management
Xavier Canonne
Architects
LEscaut Architecture
Contracting authority
Ministry of the French-speaking Community Wallonia-Brussels,
Service of Cultural Infrastructures
PRACTICAL INFORMATION
Date of opening of the new wing
1 Jun 2008
Hours: Tuesday through Sunday, 10.00 to 18.00
Entry price: starting with the opening of the new wing: individuals:
6€ - seniors, teachers (with school identity card), groups starting
at 10 people: 4€ - students, unemployed: 3€ - Article 27:
1.25€ - under age 12: free of charge
Groups and guided tours
Amélie Van Liefferinge, educational department, 071/43.58.10,
service.educatif@museephoto.be
Possibility of guided tours after hours
Price: entrance 4€ (student 3€ - free of charge for under
age 12) + cost of the guided tour (1.5 hours - 20 people per group):
50€ during the week (40€ for school groups), 60€ on
the weekend, 70€ after hours and holidays
For company events
Cécile Druart - cecile.druart@museephoto.be) 071/43.58.10
Hours: slots in timetable depending on the halls reserved
Price: depends on the halls reserved (dossier on request)
THE THREE EXHIBITION FOCUSES
A new hanging of the permanent collections
Besides the new spaces of the Museum Café, the library and
the auditorium, the new wing of the Museum of Photography will allow
a wider presentation of its permanent collection. With nearly 80,000
photographs and three million negatives, for too long a time the collection
has been short of space, forcing it to an arrangement that is too
reductionist. Numerous major works could not be exhibited there, leading
to various gaps in its historical sequence. The collections of the
19th and 20th centuries have been entirely re-thought. New halls have
been rearranged, offering a chronological and thematic hanging that
is better structured on the ground floor and the first floor of the
Carmelite convent. Photography in Belgium is now integrated better
into a wider international context; illustrated period documents
and works that helped in the dissemination of the photographic medium
will be exhibited there, as well as excerpts from avant-garde films
and experimental videos from the end of the 1960s. Naturally the new
wing will see the hanging of representative works of the last twenty
years. However, the amplitude of the spaces and their arrangement,
intended for the collection, will promote a presentation constructed
around themes and confrontations throughout the different eras of
photography in a stimulating reading of them.
The temporary exhibitions
Nine exhibitions per year, at the rate of three simultaneous exhibitions,
will go more deeply along the innumerable paths that the photographic
image has taken. Every four months creative, documentary and historical
aspects will follow each other to sketch out as wide a panorama as
possible of photography, both Belgian and international, historical
and contemporary.
From 10 May to 14 September 2008
Hugues de Wurstemberger Retrospective
Dave Anderson - Rough Beauty
Nikon Press Photo Awards 2007
From 20 September 2008 to 18 January 2009
Palestine inventée (Invented Palestine)
The First World War in the museums collection
Erika Harrsch - Eros-Thanatos
From 24 January to May 2009
Fred Baldwin & Wendy Watriss
Christian Lutz - Protokoll
The Discovery Path
This playful path in the pedagogical section of the museum is intended
for all people who are curious to learn and to allow themselves to
be surprised. Photography, its nature, its language, its specific
features are presented in an instructive and amusing way, whether
in a studio from the 1900s, through optical illusions or manipulations
of images. Finding out about photography in this space can be effectively
completed by a workshop in the traditional laboratory working with
silver salts or the brand-new digital laboratory.
Besides these three exhibition focuses, the museum is equipped with
a new projection room with retractable rows of seats that will offer
a schedule of art films and video works.
FOCUS ON THE NEW HANGING OF THE 19TH AND 20TH CENTURY COLLECTIONS
Photography in the 19th century
The invention of photography at the beginning of the 19th century
contributed to the technological upheavals that would go on to shake
society to its core. Research into how to fix and preserve an image
of visible reality by projecting it in a dark room was developed principally
in France and England.
The oldest known photograph is attributed to the Frenchman Joseph
Nicéphore Niépce (1765-1833). The view from a
window of Château du Gras taken around 1826 required almost
an entire day to take. The invention of photography was officially
unveiled in Paris on 19th August 1839 in the form of daguerreotypes.
Within just a few months, photography went from being a scientific
curiosity to a marketable product; recognition was universal.
The daguerreotype, invented by the Frenchman Daguerre (1787-1851),
one-time partner of Niépce, was a direct and unique positive
image. In the early 1850s, this technique was gradually replaced by
the negative/positive process patented by the Englishman William Henry
Fox Talbot (1800-1877).
Photography was rapidly applied to all possible sectors: portraits,
heritage, science, war, landscape, reproduction of works of art and
as models for artists. Everything was ripe for photographing in this
society that yearned to conquer the world by means of images so that
it could take possession of it, understand it and thereby master it.
During the 19th century, improvements aimed above all at achieving
optimal reproducibility for the lowest possible cost, reducing posing
times, increasing flexibility of use and improving stability.
Amateur photography developed more widely with the introduction of
the Kodak in 1889, the first camera that did not require any technical
skills. At the same time, photographys widespread fame brought
with it the question of its artistic merits.
Pictorialism, which aimed to elevate photography to the status of
the other arts, was the first international photography movement and
enjoyed great success with exhibitions, international fairs and even
the publication of luxurious reviews. However, the First World War
marked the end of the movement and also a break with the 19th century.
Photography in the 20th century
A century of torment, confusion, war, technological progress, accelerated
communication, revolutionary discoveries, hopes, utopias and globalisation,
the 20th century represented the dawn of a new era for photography.
Its appearance in the press, as well as its widespread mediatisation,
opened up new possibilities and commercial applications.
Taking advantage of technical progress that saw cameras becoming ever
smaller and easier to handle, photo-journalism bore witness to the
state of the world and brought to life events that were widely reported
by illustrated magazines. Some photographers were engaged in highlighting
human tragedy and injustice, whilst others adopted a more humanistic
line and revealed the human condition in all its dignity.
Photography started to appear within family settings in the 1930s.
In parallel, its artistic status was recognised by means of its own
language, discovering the real by means of a new and unexpected angle.
It was integrated into avant-garde, futurist, Dadaist, constructivist
and surrealist movements, enlarging its potential and enriching our
vision and perception of the world. Photographers personal projects
proliferated and were presented in galleries and on the art market,
in sections of museums (the Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1940)
and in specific institutions in the United States, and then in Europe
from the late 1960s.
Historical, aesthetic and theoretical works multiplied, and photographers
works were the subject of monographs and detailed studies.
Photography now forms an integral part of the visual arts, forming
a stimulating dialogue with other forms of expression.
More than ever before, photographers nourish our visual imagination,
presenting what we only vaguely feel and increasing our feeling
of existence (Kenneth White).
But is photography a window or a mirror? A view of reality or a reflection
of the photographers subjectivity? The two complement each other:
a window can open onto a mirror and a mirror can reflect a window.
There are billions of images and a museum of photography is like an
aquarium in an ocean
THE MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY IN CHARLEROI ARCHITECTURAL POINT
OF VIEW
Hidden within an urban island, the new wing of the Museum of Photography
in Charleroi is rooted in the orchard of an old Carmelite convent.
A park, rich in remarkable trees taken up in the inventory of the
heritage, completes this landscape, isolated from outside gazes and
marked off by an enclosing wall. Today a sport complex and a commune
school back up to the wall of the enclosure, while private gardens
come up against the impressive masonry.
By taking its position in the park, the new wing of the museum invites
the visitors to commit to this place, just like the inhabitants. The
park creates the link between three social functions: teaching, culture
and sport. Its opening to the public has become an issue in social
dynamics and urban change.
The city of Charleroi shared in this vision by submitting an urban
renovation master plan for the area concerned as a candidate
project for the Feder Fund 2007. The development of the Place Communale
and that of the Essarts, neighbouring the museum, are positioned as
intermediaries of the Feder Fund 2000-2006 on which the budget for
the new wing was partially based. Located on the edge of the city
centre, through the international aura of the Museum, this urban pole
will constitute a positive sign for the future of the city, echoing
the airport, located on the other slope of the valley of the Sambre.
As if to put a question to the neighbourhood, the new wing is designed
in successive hollows generating lines of flow toward the neighbouring
structures. These structures thus become focal points or backgrounds
for a spatial theatre design. The multiple shapes constitute the foreground,
taking on meaning through the relationships they maintain with the
context (park, homes, equipment, etc.) The interior routes take hold
of this exterior experiment and reconstitute it in the form of multiple
gazes.
The architecture plays with incessant interior/exterior relationships
and subverts their boundaries: while crossing the windowed hall of
the old Carmelite convent, the stroll is suddenly projected into the
park; the overhang hollows out into a light well to illuminate an
undergrowth hung with ferns; the winter garden shelters fruit tree
species that diffuse their perfumes inside the museum. Each space
thus constitutes a place on its own, while serving as an 'antechamber'
for the places that follow it. Interspaces, or inter-places in a manner
of speaking.
Following the formula 1+1 = 1, the new wing fits in with the continuity
of the Carmelite convent to form a single institution. The programming
of the extended museum follows from six months of maturation
with Xavier Canonne, Museum Director. During this period, the functions
will be divided between the two buildings in a "domino effect":
while moving certain existing functions, others have taken their place,
and so on.
Although the new wing was inaugurated this year, building it was already
planned at the time of the first renovation of the former Carmelite
convent. The Museum of Photography in Charleroi, arising from the
commitment of Georges and Jeanne Vercheval, has occupied the Carmelite
convent since 1987. In 1993, l'Escaut stepped in to assist in the
incorporation of works by the artists Francis Alÿs, Edith Dekyndt,
Jean-Claude Saudoyer and Marc Feulien within the framework of works
already launched. Afterwards, l'Escaut became the pilot for the entire
renovation project, which was completed in 1995.
The transformation of the former Carmelite convent into a photography
museum caused a dramatic change in the logic present in the building:
from prohibiting people from looking for religious reasons, we went
to the revelation of the image for societal reasons. Its extension
challenges the conventional logic of museums by multiplying the relationships
between photography, its history and the numerous facets of its representation.
Concerning its construction plan, it constitutes a first in Europe:
the use of solid thick plywood as structural supports for the overhang
is the result of the experience of the stability firm Weinand concerning
distinctive structures of wood. Yves Weinand is a professor at the
EPFL of Lausanne and is supplying this project with his know-how at
the international level.
Through the work of Jeanine Cohen, all this richness takes flight,
establishing a connection with the sky and with the light. Put at
the back of fine sections of aluminium, colours hardly perceptible
diffuse their reflection along with the hours of the day, following
the path of the sun and varying in the course of the seasons. A fully-fledge
photographic work, this uvre calls into question both the meaning
of photography and the issue of our senses. The luminous skin gives
an aerial lightness to this structure.
PRESENTATION OF THE LESCAUT ARCHITECTURE FIRM - www.escaut.org
A space for architectural, town planning and cultural creations and
productions, the place of humanity and the regard given to its existence,
in daily life as in representation, are the central focus of l'Escauts
concerns.
The projects are formulated through various practices. Within the
studio, the team of architects works with players from the performing
arts (actors, directors, theatre designers, producers, etc.). This
interdisciplinary approach is nourished by a dimension of welcoming
and sharing knowledge as well as pleasure. Preparing a meal is as
important as carrying out a coordination meeting or technical research.
In the field, l'Escauts commitment is expressed in concrete
terms through various levels of citizen participation (from consultation
to appropriation, and including architecture workshops, dialogues,
etc.). Anthropological research carried out by specialists, as well
as a territorial approach developed by landscapers, often back up
the architectural and urban planning skills of the studio.
Their commitment is also expressed in the staging dimension of the
projects, which signifies a very physical understanding of their profession.
The spatial forms resulting from these practices are varied and specific
according to the contexts and processes that have conditioned them.
A few recurrences nonetheless: the maximum effect with the minimum
means, with political, social and ecological awareness; a search for
lightness relieving the investment of the project in time and energy.
This approach requires continuous experimentation, and leads to concrete
expressions with a strong personality. It is valued both by public
institutions and by private clients.
Founded in 1989 by Olivier Bastin, architect-theatre designer, and
Micheline Hardy, actress-director-scriptwriter-producer, today l'Escaut
has fifteen internal members in the team, to which occasional and
recurrent partners are added, engineers, landscapers, town planners,
artists, etc.
THE MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY IN CHARLEROI NEW WING: JEANINE COHEN
www.jeaninecohen.net
Jeanine Cohen (born 1951) lives in Brussels. She is currently in the
process of completing her biggest public site-specific project to
date: covering 900m2 of the exterior facade of the Charleroi Museum
of Photographys new extension. This offers varying levels of
depth and sensation according to the lighting and time of the day.
The building has become part of a permanent photocomposition. Ondulating
behind the delicate aluminium panelling, faintly perceptible colours
diffuse their reflection according to the time of day, as the sun
trails through the sky and the seasons come and go. A photographic
work in its own right, this project questions both the meaning of
photography and our own senses. The luminous casing lends an ethereal
air to this construction.
Jeanine Cohen has been involved in projects that clearly
depend on colour and what the structuring of colour does to the surrounding
space, whether it is in the form of acrylic paint on canvas, wood
or aluminium, site-specific wall paintings where she uses a
variety of materials, like aluminium or adhesive and silkscreen
prints. Painting is seen as an agent of change. Cohens work
retains the important reflection about what painting is and how it
can take shape in relation to visual concepts, such as intensity and
the delimitation of different surfaces. The correspondence of these
premises does not divert the artists eye from what surrounds
her, especially in the case of architecture. In practice, this is
visible via the sensation of construction that underlies these carefully
created and planned works. The colour, which is used in a preferential
monochromatic tone, acts as a source of light whose self-sustenance
comes from its characteristics of fluorescent pigmentation. A visual
ambiguity is created: on one hand colour delimits zones and also evokes
the feeling of escaping the limits shaping the space, via its very
sophisticated luminous component. Moreover, the colour still captures
the attention of other sensations: its reflections seem to be giving
off heat; colour as attitude becomes the vehicle of an absorbing visual
experience.
Rita Santos, September 2007
Caroline Pagès Gallery
Jeanine Cohen also creates site-specific wall paintings for public,
private, corporate or exhibition collections. She is represented by
Galerie Caroline Pagès in Lisbon, where her work is regularly
exhibited and also shares space in Galerie i8 in Reykjavik.
Her work features in public and corporate collections in Belgium (French-speaking
Community of Belgium, Winterthur, Zurich, Agoria Group, Quai 55),
Sweden (Statens Konsrad), Iceland (SAFN Museum) and many other private
collections in Belgium, Iceland, Israel, the United Kingdom, the USA,
Portugal and France.
JEAN-PAUL HUBIN, INSTANT PORTRAITS
For several years, Jean-Paul Habin has attended previews at the Charleroi
Museum of Photography, seeking out new faces and capturing hundreds
of portraits.
At the dawn of a new future for the Museum of Photography, we have
decided to acknowledge the past, by exhibiting a selection of these
photographs which tell a little of the history of the museum and the
visitors who have, since its creation, made it what it is.
To begin with, this photographic project was just a game, but
all games need rules. Above all, for each shot I used a compact camera
wth auto focus and built-in flash.
The series could be called « instant portraits ».
I concentrated on the people I met, I photographed them immediately,
taking separate close-ups of each person.
What counted was the meeting between my finger on the shutter release
and the face in my viewfinder. I tried to preserve the freshness of
the meeting by only taking one shot of each person.
Jean-Paul Hubin
Born 1936
Photographer of people, cities, faces, landscapes, China, Nepal, Rome,
Lisbon, Venice, New York, Chicago, Mexico, Hong Kong, his garden,
his grand children, jazz musicians
Published four books and exhibited in five or six countries.
Continues to enjoy photography.
Recent exhibitions
40 neighbours, Wanzoul
180 Wanzois, Wanze
600 Hutois, Huy
2003 Hong Kong Chinese village
2004-5 two photo walls: rue lApleit, rue Pont-Palais
Looks, black and white portraits, large format on canvas
2008 100 visitors, Charleroi Museum of Photography
Publications
Trait dUnion. Photographies [Trait dUnion. Photographs],
in collaboration with 7 photographers, 1982
Jazz Impressions, ed. Photographie Ouverte, Charleroi, 1986
Fuite dimages [flood of images], Jean-Paul Hubin editor, Vinalmont,
1996
Huy vue par J-P Hubin [Huy as seen by J-P Hubin]
VIDEOGR@PHIES IN THE PHOTOGRAPHY MUSEUM
From 1976 to 1986, the broadcasting Videography produced by RTBF-Liège,
was a place of creation and reflection about the new-artistic, sociological
or political-uses of the following new ruling media : television and
radio.
For 10 years and 130 broadcastings, some hazardous minds as Jean-Paul
Tréfois, Paul Paquay, Jacques Delcuvellerie organized a unique
broadcasting in Europe and therefore compèred the essential
of the Belgian or international Art-Video and new cinema avant-garde.
Robert Stéphane, past RTBF General Director and Director of
RTBF-Liège Centre at the time of the broadcasting, has recently
created Vidéogr@phie(s) with the active collaboration of the
current RTBF Direction and well-known video experts.
First of all they had to ensure the conservation but also show broadcasting
records to advantage. Secondly they had to valorize significant works
recently produced in the Wallonie-Brussels Community.
The final ambition was and is still becoming a cybermuseum.
- Vidéogr@phie(s) was initially produced in 2003 through a
4-days retrospective during the Venice Biennal Festival.
- In 2004 there was a workshop in the Espace 251 Nord rooms and with
the help of the former and its Director Laurent Jacob.
- This event entitled Vidéogr@phie honoured past and present
art video with its digital languages.
- In 2007 Luxembourg et Grand Région, Capitale européenne
de la Culture, was the main action setting of Vidéogr@phie(s)
:
On 7-7-2007, a chosen happy date, there was a very multinational «Video
Night» (Director Enrico Lunghi) in Mamac of Liège and
in three other places of the Grande Region.
In the occasion of the Fair of the same name in Liège in October,
a Crazy Cinématrograph showed the spell of 20th
Century itinerant cinema.
This was set up in complicity with Claude Bertemes, Director of the
Luxembourg film Library.
- Nowadays a new opportunity is given to Vidéogr@phie(s) thanks
to Xavier Canonne and the Photography Museum in Charleroi. The extended
and renovated museum has chosen to ask Vidéogr@phie(s) to show
its collections in a place originally dedicated to fixed images.
During the next weeks and months, works of past and present artists
are going to be exhibited through different forms and modes :
- militant video with the Dardenne brothers;
- creators of Art Video Nam Jum Pail and Bill Viola;
- Laurie Andersons musical performances;
- Fluxus band provocative concerts;
- women stuggle for equality through video
And of course the best produced nowadays even in digital dimension.
|
Belgian Architect Studios
Charleroi Museum of Photography
Extension : main page
Project name New wing of the Charleroi Museum of Photography
Place Mont-sur-Marchienne (Belgium)
Program exhibition rooms, cafeteria, library, auditorium, educational service,
work space, storage space
Promoter Belgian French Community (Communauté Française de
Belgique)
Process
6 months of programme work with Xavier Canonne, director of the Museum
collaboration with Jeanine Cohen (artist) for the façade panelling
Architects lEscaut Architecture - Olivier Bastin, Eloisa Astudillo,
Nele Stragier, Florence Hoffmann
Structure bureau détudes Weinand
Fluids SECA
Acoustics Rémi Raskin
Landscaping LandinZicht - Bjorn Gielen
Artist Jeanine Cohen
Signage Designlab
Surface area
Built surface including the carmelite convent: 8230 m2
Surface without storage space : 4700 m2
Exhibition space (carmelite convent + new wing): 2175 m2
Budget 3 600 000 Eur. Without VAT
Completion May 2008
Belgium Court of Justice,
Hasselt
Hergé museum, Louvain-la-Neuve
Museum Buildings

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Charleroi Museum of Photography building page
welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Charleroi Museum of Photography - page : adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt
Website: www.museephoto.be + www.escaut.org/en/projects/photography-musem-3 |
|
|
|