Trapholt

Trapholt is a museum of contemporary art and design located in Kolding, Denmark. It opened in 1988 and was previously named Trapholt Kunstmuseum (Trapholt Museum of Art) but its increasing focus on the broader arts lead to its shortened name. It describes itself as a "museum for modern painting, crafts, design, and furniture design".[1]

Trapholt
Established1988
LocationKolding, Denmark
TypeArt museum
Visitors82,994 (2018)
DirectorKaren Grøn
CuratorVera Westergaard
ArchitectBoje Lundgaard, Bente Aude
OwnerAutonomous public institution
Websitetrapholt.dk

Background

The museum was expanded in 1996 to house a furniture collection with contemporary Danish furniture design, with a collection of over 500 chairs from the 20th century, which is the largest in Denmark.[2] The spiral architecture of this part of the museum is inspired by the Guggenheim Museum. It also holds collections of crafts, primarily ceramics and textiles.

Trapholt comprises the museum itself and its surrounding sculpture park which includes works by Ingvar Cronhammar, Bjørn Nørgaard, Lars Ravn, and Søren Jensen. In addition to temporary exhibitions, the museum hosts a permanent exhibition of paintings by Richard Mortensen. Totalling over 2,500 square metres, Trapholt is one of the largest modern art and design museums in Denmark outside Copenhagen.[3]

Arne Jacobsen's Kubeflex modular summer house, created by the architect in 1969-70, is located at Trapholt. It is the only of its kind as it never entered production given the artist's death in 1971 and is furnished with Jacobsen's own designs. Until 2002 it was used as a private summer house by the Jacobsen family, but was moved from Sydsjælland to Trapholt in 2005 and opened to the public.[4]

In 2000, the museum gained international notability when artist Marco Evaristti exhibited his work Helena, an installation featuring ten functioning blenders each containing a live goldfish, allowing viewers to turn on and kill the fish. At least one visitor did, killing two fish.[5] Danish animal rights charity Dyrenes Beskyttelse complained and then-Director of Trapholt Peter Meyer was fined 2000 DKK for animal cruelty as he refused a police request to turn off the blenders.[6] After refusing to pay the fine, Meyer and the museum were taken to court, where they were eventually acquitted of the charge and the fine was retracted.

gollark: Oh bee, it is possible that they are asleep or something and will not answer.
gollark: <@!231856503756161025> Can I send in even MORE bids for purposes?
gollark: OH APIO OH FORM
gollark: Computational physical geometry is a cutting-edge field, and observation of the fundamental properties of shapes can only really be done indirectly with significant error.
gollark: You're never really "certain" of anything.

References

  1. "Vedtægter for Trapholt" (PDF). Trapholt.dk. 1 January 2014. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  2. "TRAPHOLT ART MUSEUM". Architizer. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  3. "Trapholt | An art, design and hygge immersion". Scan Magazine. 6 August 2019. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  4. "Arne Jacobsens sommerhus". Trapholt.dk.
  5. "Liquidising goldfish 'not a crime'". 19 May 2003. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  6. Bomsdorf, Clemens (28 August 2013). "Goldfish in a Blender? Marco Evaristti Calls It Art". WSJ. Retrieved 7 January 2020.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.