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Moderna movement: like MoMA in New York (p76), Stockholm's Moderna Museet has had to move into temporary premises, designed quickly with great ingenuity on a limited budget.


New temporary premises for the Museum of Modern Art (Moderna Museet Moderna museet, the Museum of Modern Art, Stockholm, Sweden, is a state museum located on the island of Skeppsholmen in central Stockholm, that was first opened in 1958. Its first manager was Pontus Hultén. ) in Stockholm, designed in eminently civilized fashion by Frane Hederus Malmstrom, were made necessary by the closure for two years of Rafael Moneo's building on Skeppsholmen, housing the Modern Museum and The Swedish Museum of Architecture (AR November 1998). The building is undergoing treatment and improvement following discovery of spreading damp and mould, and consequent poor air quality. While the Museum of Architecture has moved its exhibitions to the Swedish Royal Academy of Fine Arts on Fredsgatan and its offices to Drottninggatan. the Modern Museum was allotted al·lot  
tr.v. al·lot·ted, al·lot·ting, al·lots
1. To parcel out; distribute or apportion: allotting land to homesteaders; allot blame.

2.
 a warehouse on Klarabergsviadukten in the centre of Stockholm, between the central station and city hall. The building, constructed in 1987, was for a short time a postal sorting office sorting office noficina de clasificación del correo

sorting office n (Post) → bureau m de tri

sorting office sort n
, but the advance of technology rendered it redundant. Bought by the city, it is to be turned into a conference centre once the Modern Museum has departed in eighteen months' time.

The museum is a distinguished institution with one of the best collections in the world of modern art from the beginning of the 1900s to the present day, and of photography from the 1840s. The move has meant temporary dispersal dis·per·sal  
n.
The act or process of dispersing or the condition of being dispersed; distribution.

Noun 1. dispersal
 of the collections but the spirit of Swedish democracy is alive and strong, as is the belief that the art belongs to the Swedish people
This article deals with the Swedish people as an ethnic group. For information about residents or nationals of Sweden, see Demographics of Sweden. For information on other uses please see the disambiguation articles Swedish and Swede (disambiguation)


, and the museum has taken the opportunity to send exhibitions round the country. The museum's star had been somewhat on the wane, but the recent appointment of Lars Nittves Lars Nittve (born 17 September 1953) is a Swedish museologist and art critic. Between 1979 and 1985 he was an art critic on the Swedish newspaper Svenska Dagbladet.  as director (he was previously the director of Tate Modern The Tate Modern in London is Britain's national museum of international modern art and is, with Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool, Tate St Ives, and Tate Online[1], part of the group now known simply as Tate.  in London), is seen as heralding a new golden period.

For the moment the museum's staff, as well as the public, appreciate the spaciousness, light and air of their temporary home. Informing the design is the idea that this should be essentially a place where people can keep in touch with the activities of the museum through catalogues, magazines, internet and video, and attend exhibitions and events. It is a lively and welcoming place, with a bookshop and restaurant either side of the entrance foyer, and a comprehensive information centre, photographic library, children's workshop and gallery.

In achieving popular success, the architects working with the museum have performed something of a feat, for the budget was tight and the premises had to be ready within five or so months. Keeping to budget was effected by retaining as much as possible of the existing structure and fittings -- ceilings, for example have simply been repainted -- and by using relatively cheap materials such as rubber flooring and plastic sheeting.

The plan of the building is shaped like the tail of an aircraft, tapering Tapering
Gradually reducing the amount of a drug when stopping it abruptly would cause unpleasant withdrawal symptoms.

Mentioned in: Narcotics

tapering,
n
 from (roughly) north to south. Most of it is devoted to offices, conservation workshops and a packing room. Only a relatively small area, skewed skewed

curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean.

skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data
 round from the entrance from the street on the north, to the main south-west face of the building, where it overlooks the city hall, is devoted to the public domain. A large wall, devised in collaboration with the museum's graphic design agency, Storakers, runs around the upper edge of this public realm and guides visitors from the entrance into the interior.

The space, fitted with lighting tracks, is infinitely flexible. Sliding partitions can shut off part of it so that only the restaurant, or the restaurant and information centre are open, while screens in the information centre can be moved to define spaces for special activities. Between information and the exhibition gallery is a glowing box shedding luminance The amount of brightness, measured in lumens, that is given off by a pixel or area on a screen. For example, dark red and bright red would have the same chrominance, but a different luminance.  into the interior. It is composed of three walls of structured plastic sheeting illuminated from behind, and a multi-media wall for back projection.

RELATED ARTICLE: Architect

Arkitektkontoret Frane Hederus Malmstrom Stockholm

Project architects

Bjorn Malmstrom, Lars Johan Tengner, Asa Conradsson, Inger Soderin, John Magee The name John Magee can refer to:
  • John Magee (bishop), (b. 1936), Catholic Bishop of Cloyne, the former private secretary of Pope John Paul I
  • John Magee (1794) (1794—1868), US Representative from New York State
, Jan Kronslev, Per Hederus.

Photographs

Adam Mork, Copenhagen
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Article Details
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Author:McGuire, Penny
Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Oct 1, 2002
Words:637
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