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Fuglsang Kunstmuseum, Lolland, Denmark, Images, Design, Art Collection, Photo
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum, Danmark : Information
Danish Architecture by Tony Fretton Architects
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum, Lolland, Denmark
Tony Fretton Architects
The purpose built 2,500 sqm art museum has been designed by Tony Fretton
Architects to house the Storstrøm Art Museums permanent
collection of Danish fine art dating from the period 1780-1980.
Photographs © Helene Binet

The 2,500 sqm building also houses new galleries for temporary exhibitions,
a shop, a café, a learning centre, administration spaces and
storage for the museums vast collection of painting and sculpture.
Located in Fuglsang, Lolland, Southern Denmark, the new building has
the formal abstractness and romantic profile of neighbouring buildings
and is designed to harmonise with the idyllic rural setting of the
Fuglsang estate.
Stirling Prize Nominee
2009
We asked an employee at the building what they thought of it:
Astrid Lomholt, Educational sector on Fuglsang Kunstmuseum - English
text:
All in all it is a lovely building to work in. There is a good
internal light which aids the desire to work there. We have space
to be ourselves within the offices and space for small informal
meetings to take place, as and when needed, in the library. The
kitchen has a good outdoor area used by many employees during the
summer. The view to both the garden and the open fields give a good
feeling for space and peace. There is space enough for the employees
to move their furnishings around to suit their needs and temperaments,
this helps create a feeling of ownership of the building.
Astrid Lomholt, Skoletjenesten Fuglsang Kunstmuseum - Daniish text:
Alt i alt er det et dejligt hus at sidde i. Der er et fantastisk
lys og rummende giver en god lyst til at arbejde. Der er plads til
at være sig selv på kontoret og der er plads til uformelle
møder i biblioteket. Køkkenet er forsynet med en god
terrasse, som mange benytter om sommeren. Udsigten både til
haven og til de åbne marker, igennem de store vinduespartier
giver pladsfornemmelse og ro. Der er plads til at flytte rundt på
tingene, så de passer til ens temperament, det giver en en
fornemmelse af egerskab i bygningen.
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum - Information from the RIBA
Frettons design consciously eschews the two stereotypes of the
modern-day art space: the flashy icon project designed to pull in
the punters, and the white cube, designed to attract, rather, the
opposite, a rarefied audience of connoisseurs. The clients considered
brief demanded an approachable, domestic-scale gallery which, nonetheless,
had presence, and in which the studying of art by curators in the
offices, and the experience of art in the galleries were connected,
without getting in the way of one another. This Fretton achieves hands-down.
It is well constructed and detailed, and clearly erudite, with nods
in its composition to architectural history. It feels, said one judge,
almost as if it could have been built in any decade since the 20s.
That is quite a compliment.
PRESS STATEMENT
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum, Lolland Denmark
Official Press View: Mar 08 from Tony Fretton Architects
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum
Unlike the location of an urban museum that is reached through the
room-like spaces of a city, to go to Fuglsang entails a long journey
through open countryside, finally arriving on a long straight road
through a loose assembly of buildings to a courtyard at the heart
of the Estate. Enclosing the west side of the courtyard is a long,
low walled barn, painted white with a tall roof. On the north side
is the land steward’s house, long again, simply ornamented and made
of pale brick.
To the south is the Manor House, set back by an appropriate distance
and separated by a moat. Country classical in style, the red brick
façade is arranged in three tall gables and the interior has decorated
ceilings and parquet floors that change in pattern from room to room.
The best of its rooms look out to a refined landscaped garden behind
and have long been places for the performance of music.
In the attic are small plain bedrooms for visitors who come to stay
and walk in the wonderful countryside to Skejten and the bird sanctuary
at the edge of the sea in Guldborgsund, which lie to the east of the
courtyard.
Out in the fields on this side of the courtyard lie another barn,
this one painted red, and the original forge building with the path
to Skejten running between them.
What would it mean to place a Museum, a new building of a different
kind here, to bring visitors to it and to alter the landscape around
it? These were questions that Torben Schønherr the landscape designer,
Ebbe Wæhrens my colleague and executive architect and I asked ourselves
when we first stood looking at Fuglsang.
The Museum and its surroundings
The landscape and sea to the east had such significance that I felt
that they should be the first thing that visitors saw as they came
to the Museum.
To leave the courtyard open to the view and place the Museum in line
with the land steward’s house, pointing to the horizon was controversial.
A strong suggestion had been made in the brief of the architectural
competition by which we were selected, that the new Museum should
reinstate the original form of the courtyard by enclosing its east
side.
Instead, like the red barn and the forge, the Museum extends into
the fields while having a strange axial but offset relation to the
most significant of the buildings, the Manor House and its formal
surroundings.
Connection between the two buildings is further established by the
way that the Museum is first presented to visitors as a brick façade,
the same length as the Manor House, with three diagonal roof lights
above that relate to the three gables in the façade of the Manor House.
Like the buildings around the courtyard, and many classic works of
Danish modernism, the facades of the Museum are constructed from brick.
As in the barn on the west side of the court, they are painted white
and the roof lights are in a grey brick the colour of the roofs of
the buildings around it.
At the entrance to the Museum the façade steps back, making a place
for visitors to gather at the edge of the courtyard. At this point
the view of the land and sea is temporarily taken away and the Museum
and visitors become the focus.
A canopy of painted metal in the form of an open sided cube, low and
wide, provides shelter from the rain, and is matched by a glass wind
lobby of equal scale and transparency in the entrance foyer within
the building.
One end of the foyer is arranged as a café, the other as a bookshop
and reception area, both of which look out through extensive windows
to the courtyard on one side and the other into a public art studio
and beautiful existing garden behind it. A glass door in the reception
area shows the way to the library and offices on the first floor,
and other doors indicate the lecture hall, toilets and place to hang
your coat.
The foyer is a public place in which everything is where it can be
found and enjoyed in the company of friends and strangers within the
landscape and spaces of Fuglsang. From within it there is a line of
sight to the long central gallery of the Museum, around which the
other galleries are laid out, and along it to a view of the landscape
and sea at its end that resembles the first narrow view seen when
entering the Estate.
The galleries are very different in scale and character from the public
space of the foyer and are places into which groups of visitors can
spread out and immerse themselves in the collection, finding that
it is arranged in three suites.
The first of these is to the right of the central gallery and consists
of medium scale rooms arranged enfilade. Paintings from 1800-1900
are displayed in the first three rooms of the suite, which have ornamented
ceilings and are lit by the diagonal roof lights that were seen above
the façade. Further along is a room for works on paper, which for
reasons of conservation is artificially lit. At the end is a gallery
for plaster casts that is lit by a window looking out towards Sketjen.
Between the galleries are very small rooms, called pockets, where
a few people can view a single work of art.
On the opposite side of the corridor is a single, large, minimally
detailed gallery for temporary exhibitions. Abstract and reconfigurable,
daylight comes into this tall space through a diffusing ceiling of
open metal grids, above which there is space to support suspended
artworks and install projectors.
Further along on this side is the third suite, consisting of a plainly
detailed top lit space that is configured with screens into four rooms.
Here works of Modernism from the early to mid twentieth century will
be hung, ranging from medium scale figurative works to large abstract
canvases.
Connecting these spaces is the central gallery, which is neither simply
an exhibition space nor a place of circulation. Couches could be interspersed
with artworks in the classical manner or the whole space given over
to an exhibition or an event. At the end is a room that seems like
a gallery but has only windows giving views of the sea and landscape,
which is intended as a place to rest and reflect.
The different characters of the galleries and public spaces developed
empirically as we designed and they are bound together in a similar
way to Fuglsang itself, where very different styles of buildings and
spaces are connected by simple similarities.
In this way, and through the loss and recovery of the view of landscape
and sea that occurs within the Museum, some underlying qualities of
the locale are introduced to the quiet, top lit exhibition spaces
of the interior. Our intention is for the Museum to be filled with
slight differences that are stimulating but unobtrusive, so the art
not the building predominates, and for there to be a combination of
familiarity and emptiness that allows the building to become the imaginative
property of those who come to it.
A group of dwellings in Amsterdam, an office building in the historical
quarter of Copenhagen and the New British Embassy in Warsaw illustrate
how Tony Fretton Architects is diversifying, building on a reputation
as a sensitive designer of spaces for art, for which it has become
renowned.
Founded in 1982, the practice established an international reputation
in the early ‘90s with the design of the Lisson Gallery, London. Acclaimed
projects for the public arts sector ensued, including Artsway in Hampshire,
a new gallery in the Yorkshire Sculpture Park for the Arts Council
Collection of Sculpture, and the renovation of the Camden Arts Centre
in North London, which reopened in 2004.
Arts spaces remain an integral part of the practice’s activity, as
demonstrated in Fuglsang Kunstmuseum, the practice’s first major art
space overseas.
In addition to designing buildings for the display of art, the practice
has designed exhibition spaces, houses and studios for artists, and
created studio spaces for artists’ collectives. The practice has just
completed a new house in central London for the British sculptor Anish
Kapoor.
The practice continues to work at various scales, from modest buildings
such as the award winning Faith House in Poole to major urban master-plans
such as the £10 million residential scheme for Andreas Ensemble in
Amsterdam, which is currently at design stage.
Other projects in Denmark include Tietgens Ærgrelse, a new mixed-use
building in Copenhagen. Located on the corner of Frederiksgade Square,
the 6 storey development has been designed to complement the Beaux
Art ensemble surrounding the Marble Church.
As well as being the principal designer of all projects at Tony Fretton
Architects, Tony is Professor of Architectural Design & Interiors
at the Technical University Delft, the Netherlands and is active in
the discourse of architecture.
Fuglsang
Kunstmuseum award : WAF Awards 2008 - Culture Category Shortlist
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum - Building Information
Project: Fuglsang Kunstmuseum
Location: Nystedvej 71, DK - 4891 Toreby L., Denmark
Museum website: www.fuglsangkunstmuseum.dk
Opening Hours: Tue-Thur, 9am-2pm, Fri-Sun, 11am-5pm
Client: BYGNINGSFONDEN/ The Building Foundation
Contact: Lene Grønfeldt
Funding: Fonden Realdania, Størstroms Amt, Lolland Falsterske
and European Fund for Regional Development
Value: € 7.2m
Programme: Appointed May 2005, on site Aug 2006, opening Jan 2008
Internal area: 2,500 sqm
DESIGN TEAM:
Architects: Tony Fretton Architects
Design team: Tony Fretton, Jim McKinney, Donald Matheson, Guy Derwent,
Annika Rabi, Sandy Rendel, Matt Barton, Nina Lundvall, Simon Jones,
Gus Brown.
Project Architect: Donald Matheson
Competition team: Tony Fretton, Jim McKinney, David Owen, Matt Barton,
Michael Lee, Nina Lundvall, Simon Jones, Martin Nässén
CONSULTANTS:
Executive Architect: BBP Arkitekter A/S, Copenhagen.
Structural Engineer: Birch & Krogboe A/S
Services Engineer: Birch & Krogboe A/S
Project Management: BASCON A/S
Main Contractor: CC BRUN ENTERPRISE A/S
Cost Consultant: Birch & Krogboe A/S
Landscape Architect: Schønherr Landskab A/S, Copenhagen.
Furniture design: Tony Fretton Architects
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum Denmark images / information from Tony Fretton
Architects
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Danish
Architect Offices
Denmark Architecture - Selection:
Utzon Center, Aalborg, Jylland
Kim Utzon Architects

photo : Torben Eskerod Denmark
Aarhus Concert Hall
Arkitektfirmaet C. F. Møller

picture from the architect
Herning Center of the Arts
Danish Arts Building :
Willlumsens Museum

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the Fuglsang Kunstmuseum page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Fuglsang Kunstmuseum Denmark - page: adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
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