Edito

Lisa De Visscher – Editor-in-Chief

And then there was the new Muhka. Or almost. The open call for the construction of a new Museum of Contemporary Art in Antwerp was unexpectedly halted last spring by Flemish Minister for Culture Jan Jambon. What happened? Despite years of preliminary studies and four proposals submitted by experienced, world-renowned teams of architects, the selection committee was unable to reach a unanimous decision. The reactions in the media were numerous and scathing. And rightly so. Hidden agendas were evident both in Flemish politics and at the local economic level. Opportunistic wrangling behind the scenes swept the work of many years and dozens of people, including the architectural teams, off the table in one fell swoop. The secrecy surrounding this entire competition – the projects are not allowed to be published! – runs counter to everything an Open Call stands for and makes the much-needed social and architectural debate impossible.

Suppose the MuHKA were not a museum, but a social housing project, an office complex or even a school: no one would have batted an eyelid. Both the procedure and the reaction to it would have unfolded quite differently. After all, because it carries so much prestige, a museum is always a project in which appropriation plays a significant role. Everyone wants to claim the project as their own: the architect, the museum director, the city and the funding authorities.

‘Museums are both major tourist attractions for cities and alternative social spaces,’ writes Pieter T’Jonck in his article ‘Museum architecture: friend or foe?’. Ever since Frank Gehry left his mark on Bilbao with the Guggenheim in 1997, we have known that a museum can be the trump card in the gamble of city marketing. Since Covid-19, however, we have also come to realise the high price of a tourist monoculture. “A museum doesn’t have to be a magnet,” argues Annette Gigon for that very reason. Together with Mike Guyer, she has designed a dozen museums, always seeking to strike the right note – from a healing effect on public space and public participation to the search for the right exhibition space with the right lighting.

Precisely because so many parties wish to claim the museum – as a building, as a collection, as a calling card for the city – the question of identity is never far away. KANAL–Centre Pompidou in Brussels and the Folklore Museum in Mouscron, for example, represent the two extremes of the spectrum when it comes to the collections on display. Yet, despite their international ambitions, both projects are firmly rooted in local identity, which is both embodied in their architecture and conveyed through it. In this issue, we show how architecture can not only materialise a museum’s ambitions, but also give them wings and breathe new life into them. Except at the MuHKA, that is: there, identity – in this case, the Flemish one – turned out to be its Achilles’ heel.

Table of contents

MUSEUMS

 

Editorial
Lisa De Visscher

 

Opinion – MuHKA, Antwerp

Edith Wouters

 

Francesca Torzo

z33, Hasselt

 

V+ & Projectiles

Museum of Folklore, Mouscron

 

Museum architecture: friend or foe?

Pieter T’Jonck

 

Open Call: Design Museum, Ghent

Pieter T’Jonck

 

FVWW

Ypres Museum, Ypres

 

Beguin-Massart

Trinkhall MADmusée, Liège

 

Office Kersten Geers David Van Severen

Tim Van Laere Gallery, Antwerp

 

noA – em2n – Sergison Bates

KANAL-Centre Pompidou, Brussels

 

Interview Gigon/Guyer

Lisa De Visscher

 

THEATERS

 

dmvA

Nona Arts Centre, Mechelen

 

TRANS – V+

Leietheater, Deinze

 

Philippe Samyn and Partners

Le Delta, Namur

 

OPINION

 

Ten years after the integration of the universities of applied sciences: taking stock

Vincent Becue, Fabienne Courtejoie, Jean-Louis Genard and Jean Stillemans

 

NEWS

 

In Memoriam Christian Kieckens

Caroline Voet

 

Generiek

Eline Dehullu

 

Thomas Demand

Mathieu Berteloot and Véronique Patteeuw

 

Générale

Lara Molino

 

Studio Thomas Willemse

Gitte Van den Bergh

 

Desired Spaces

Eline Dehullu

 

Architecture Year Book Flanders No. 14

Pieter T’Jonck

 

Interview with Rem Koolhaas

Laura Herman and Christophe Van Gerrewey

 

STUDENT

 

Existenz KU Leuven

Eline Dehullu

 

#007

Michiel De Cleene