The Vitra Design Museum is a privately owned museum for design in Weil am Rhein, Germany. The architect of this building was Frank O. Gehry. His architecture was based off of the art movement of the early 20th century, deconstructivism. Making the building itself a work of art along with the work in the museum. There were many exhibitions within this museum that demonstrated architecture through a multitude of different forms.

Vitra Design Museum
The Vitra Design Museum building by Frank O. Gehry, side view
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Established1989
LocationWeil am Rhein, Germany
Coordinates47°36′10″N 7°37′05″E / 47.60278°N 7.61806°E / 47.60278; 7.61806
FounderRolf Fehlbaum
ArchitectFrank Gehry

Former Vitra CEO, and son of Vitra founders Willi and Erika Fehlbaum, Rolf Fehlbaum founded the museum in 1989 as an independent private foundation. The Vitra corporation provides it with a financial subsidy, the use of Vitra architecture, and organizational cooperation.

Frank O.Gehry was inspired by Raphael Soriano early in his career, but soon developed his own style with very curvilinear forms and structures, he wanted the building to feel alive. He was the architect for many museums and concert halls because he liked the relationship that the music and the art had to the people in the space. Gehry created museums that where warehouses with no windows making the skin the main aspect of the building which forces the architecture to play with the nature around it.[1]

Collection and activities

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Eero Saarinen's Tulip Chair, one of the pieces represented in the permanent collection.
 
Cabriolet Bed, from an exposition of works by Joe Cesare Colombo.

The museum's collection, focusing on furniture and interior design, is centered on the bequest of U.S. designers Charles and Ray Eames, as well as numerous works of designers such as George Nelson, Alvar Aalto, Verner Panton, Dieter Rams, Jean Prouvé, Richard Hutten and Michael Thonet. It is one of the world's largest collections of modern furniture design, including pieces representative of all major periods and styles from the beginning of the nineteenth century onwards.

These works, originally the private collection of Rolf Fehlbaum, are now permanently on display at the newly completed Schaudepot building on the Vitra premises. In addition, the museum puts on temporary exhibitions in the main building, often with loans from other collections. In turn, parts of the collection are lent to other institutions around the world.

In addition, the museum produces workshops, publications and museum products, as well as maintaining an archive, a restoration and conservation laboratory, and a research library. It also organises guided tours of the Vitra premises, a major attraction to those interested in modern architecture. The museum produced the travelling exhibition 'Rudolf Steiner - Alchemy of the Everyday', a major retrospective exhibition drawn from its own collection and borrowed exhibits, coinciding with the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the birth of its subject.[2][3]

Radical Design is an art exhibition that was shown in the museum in the 1960s and 70s. This exhibition was not shown in the main building, but in one of the storage buildings that also shows work of the museum. The architects of this storage unit, Schaudepot, was Herzog & de Meuron. The storage unit opened in June of 2016 and the Radical Design was the first exhibition. This exhibition shows work from Italian artists that were going against the times of consumerism and mass production. Because of their beliefs there were very few building contracts so these groups were formed to create work that was absurd, provocative, fantastical, and contradictory. Seven of these projects were shown in the museums storage unit. This additional building is large so it can exhibit some of their larger pieces. The artwork is shown in the long hallways that are sectioned off. The work for the Radical Design exhibition is presented in context of other works to show the history and to better understand that history behind the work and what preceded the times.[4]

Cubism is a movement that happened all over Europe during the early 20th century. Czech Cubism is a movement that happened in the Czech Republic and was based off of the decorative arts and architecture which is the main exhibitions in the Vitra museum. Alexander von Vegesack published a book about this topic in 1991. This book discusses the movement of Cubism itself, but also how this movement affected architecture, and specifically what was happening with Czech architects, painters, sculptors, and authors. This group of artist created an exhibition that travelled throughout the Czech Republic and was exhibited in the Vitra Design Museum in the late 1900s which reintroduced the culture to Europe.[5]

Museum building

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The museum building, an architectural attraction in its own right, was Frank O. Gehry's first building in Europe, realised in cooperation with the Lörrach architect Günter Pfeifer. Together with the museum, which was originally just designed to house Rolf Fehlbaum's private collection, Gehry also built a more functional-looking production hall and a gatehouse for the close-by Vitra factory.

Although Gehry used his trademark sculptural deconstructivist style for the museum building, he did not opt for his usual mix of materials, but limited himself to white plaster and a titaniumzinc alloy. For the first time, he allowed curved forms to break up his more usual angular shapes. The sloping white forms appear to echo the Notre Dame du Haut chapel by Le Corbusier in Ronchamp, France, not far from Weil.

The building was based off of the art movement of deconstructivism and deconstructive architecture. This movement moves away from rational architecture and unity, harmony, and continuity. These architectural designs were geometric without being rectilinear but rather distorted and displaced. Instead it follows the golden rectangle which is a proportional system that allows the work to function proportionally.[6]

Architecture critic Paul Heyer described the general impression on the visitor as

“... a continuous changing swirl of white forms on the exterior, each seemingly without apparent relationship to the other, with its interiors a dynamically powerful interplay, in turn directly expressive of the exterior convolutions. As a totality it resolves itself into an entwined coherent display...”[7]

The building backs the factory fence and is embedded in a meadow adorned with cherry trees. Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen's prominent sculpture Balancing Tools provides a colourful contrast,[8][9] while Tadao Ando's nearby conference pavilion gives a more muted one. The neighboring Vitra Fire Station ( a former fire station) is used for some of the events and exhibitions of the museum.[10]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Fortune Magazine (2018-10-30). How I Got Started: Frank Gehry I Fortune. Retrieved 2024-11-20 – via YouTube.
  2. ^ Kries, Mateo & von Vegesack, Alexander (editors) (2010) Rudolf Steiner - Alchemy of the Everyday, Vitra Design Museum: Weil am Rhein.
  3. ^ Paull, John (2011) "A Postcard from Stuttgart: Rudolf Steiner's 150th anniversary exhibition 'Kosmos'", Journal of Bio-Dynamics Tasmania, 103 (Sept.), pp. 8-11.
  4. ^ Stauffer, Marie Theres (2017-06-01). "Review: Radical Design". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 76 (2): 258–260. doi:10.1525/jsah.2017.76.2.258. ISSN 0037-9808.
  5. ^ Vegesack & Lamarová, Alexander & Milena (1992). Czech cubism: Architecture, furniture, and Decorative Arts, 1910-1925 (in Czech). New York, N.Y: Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 1–4.
  6. ^ Aljubori, Luai; Alalouch, Chaham (2018-11-04). "Finding Harmony in Chaos: The Role of the Golden Rectangle in Deconstructive Architecture". International Journal of Architectural Research: ArchNet-IJAR. 12 (3): 183. doi:10.26687/archnet-ijar.v12i3.1696. ISSN 1938-7806.
  7. ^ Paul Heyer. American Architecture: Ideas and Ideologies in the Late Twentieth Century. p. 233-234.
  8. ^ "Balancing Tools - Case History", official Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen website. [Consulted 2 Feb. 2020].
  9. ^ Vitra Campus Architecture, Vitra International AG. [Consulted 2 Feb. 2020].
  10. ^ "Vitra | 09 - Fire Station". www.vitra.com. Retrieved 2023-09-25.
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