Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography is the oldest photography museum in Amsterdam. The museum is housed in a monumental canal house at Keizersgracht 401. Since 1999, it has served as the first museum in the Netherlands fully dedicated to photography as an art form, also known as Huis Marseille.
Huis Marseille, Museum voor Fotografie | |
Established | 1999 |
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Location | Keizersgracht 401 Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Coordinates | 52°22′04″N 4°53′06″E / 52.36764°N 4.88487°E |
Type | photography museum |
Visitors | 37,241 (2014)[1] |
Director | Nanda van den Berg[2] |
Curator | Nanda van den Berg |
Public transit access | tram 2 and 12 (Keizersgracht) metro 52 (Rokin) bus (Elandsgracht) |
Website | http://www.huismarseille.nl/en/ |
The museum offers a diverse exhibition program and stands out for the unique historical ambiance of its two seventeenth-century canal houses. Many original details have been meticulously preserved, including richly decorated ceiling paintings, elegant stucco work, marble finishes, and a distinctive Louis XIV-style room featuring a striking red interior; the building was restored and the museum extended into the adjacent building in 2007–2013.[3][4]
Huis Marseille deviates from the traditional "white cube" layout. Its authentic, light-filled spaces enhance the presentation and experience of the photographic works. In addition, the museum features a photography library, a specialized photobook store, and a canal garden with a historic garden house. The artistic nature of photography is a central theme at Huis Marseille. In an era where photography is an omnipresent and accessible (mass) medium, the art form continues to evolve. Huis Marseille focuses on photography that emphasizes an artistic visual language, characterized by a passionate spirit of inquiry and avant-garde innovation. Additionally, photography at Huis Marseille holds societal relevance, offering numerous connections to the shifting spirit of the times.
The museum has showcased works by renowned photographers such as Berenice Abbott, Deborah Turbeville, Cy Twombly, Samuel Fosso, Dana Lixenberg, Viviane Sassen, Bernd and Hilla Becher, Edward Burtynsky, and Deana Lawson. In addition, the museum houses an extensive collection of contemporary photography, featuring works by artists including Jacqueline Hassink, Guy Tillim, Anton Corbijn, Thomas Struth, and Sophie Calle.
History
editThe museum Huis Marseille takes its name from the building in which it is housed. The monumental canal house is built around 1665 for the French merchant Isaac Focquier. On the building’s impressive, classical façade, Focquier placed a stone depicting the layout of the French port city of Marseille. The ship he had outfitted in Marseille, which brought him to Amsterdam, made him a wealthy man.
For several years, he was a member of Amsterdam's College van Commercie (College of Commerce), where his experience as a successful merchant allowed him to influence trade matters. His involvement with the commission coincided with the construction of his house on the Keizersgracht, underscoring his status as a respectable figure. Focquier had distinguished himself and risen to the highest circles of Amsterdam, an elite class of affluent, self-assured men immortalized in group portraits such as Rembrandt’s Syndics of the Drapers' Guild (De Staalmeesters).
The houses
editThree hundred years later, the original seventeenth-century layout of the house—consisting of a 'front' segment, a courtyard, a 'back' segment and garden—is still largely intact.[5]
In the current garden room hangs an original ceiling painting from 1730, specially created for the house by Jacob de Wit, the leading decorator of the 18th century. The work depicts Apollo, seated on the clouds, flanked by Minerva and the nine Muses. The ceiling piece was housed in the Rijksmuseum for many years but returned to its original location in 2004, after a thorough restoration, on loan from the Royal Archaeological Society (Koninklijk Oudheidkundig Genootschap).
In September 2013, the museum was expanded to include the neighboring building at Keizersgracht 399, providing the museum with more exhibition space, a larger library, and its own collection storage. The first exhibition in the expanded Huis Marseille took place in September 2013. Since the expansion in 2013, Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography, consists of two connected buildings. Both buildings have five floors accessible to visitors, with a total of fourteen different exhibition rooms.
The most striking feature of the extension is a Louis XIV-style room from the early 18th century. Over the decades, the room has featured various colors. Beneath the last cream-colored layer of paint, olive green, earth-toned, and scarlet pigments were found. This particular shade of red is almost unique in the Netherlands in a reference room. In consultation with the Bureau for Monuments and Archaeology (Bureau Monumenten en Archeologie), it was decided to restore the detailed red wall and ceiling moldings to their original state.
Exhibitions
editSome of the exhibitions that have taken place at Huis Marseille:[6]
- David Goldblatt: Intersections (2007)
- Jacqueline Hassink: The Power Show (2007)
- Edward Burtynsky: Oil (2009)
- Digitaal? Analoog! met fotoveiling ten bate van fotografielaboratorium Aap-lab (2010)
- First Light: Fotografie & Astronomie (2010)
- Scarlett Hooft Graafland: Soft Horizons (2011)
- Yasusuke Ota: The Abandoned Animals of Fukushima (2012)
- Viviane Sassen: In and out of fashion (2012)
- Rob Hornstra: Gouden jaren (2013)
- Apartheid & After (2014)
- Taco Anema: In Conference. Portraits of Dutch Administrative Boards (2014)
- Cor Jaring: Cor was hier (2015)
- Stephan Shore: Retrospective (2016)
- Dana Lixenberg: Imperial Courts (2016)
- Eddo Hartmann: Setting the Stage: Pyongyang, North Korea, Part 2
- Jeff Cowen: Photoworks (2017)
- Jamie Hawkesworth: Landscape with Tree (2017)
- Joscha Steffens: Teen Spirit Island
- Harold Strak & Willem van Zoetendaal: Amsterdam Stuff (2018)
- Helga Paris, Céline van Balen, Esther Kroon & Julie Greve: Futures Past & Present (2019)
- Berenice Abbott: Portraits of Modernity (2019)
- Elspeth Diederix: When Red Disappears (2019)
- Deana Lawson (2019)
- Jean-Luc Mylayne: The Autumn of Paradise (2020)
- Farah Al Qasimi, Frida Orupabo, Coco Capitán, Myriam Boulos: Infinite Identities (2020)
- Vincent Delbrouck: Champú (2021)
- Sohrab Hura: Spill (2021)
- Luc Delahaye: Le Village (2021)
- Charlotte Dumas: Ao (2021)
- Lindokuhle Sobekwa: Umkhondo. Tracing memory (2022)
- Dana Lixenberg: Polaroid 54/59/79 (2022)
- Sabelo Mlangeni: Isivumelwano (2022)
- Dirk Kome: Vijf lange meden (2022)
- Jochen Lempert: Natural sources (2022)
- Nhu Xuan Hua: Hug of a swan (2022)
References
edit- ^ [1], Toeristiche Barometer, 2015. Retrieved on 1 October 2015.
- ^ "Info". Huis Marseille. Huis Marseille. Retrieved 1 October 2015.
- ^ David Rosenberg, "Jacqueline Hassink: View, Kyoto": "Our Seven Favorite Photography Shows From 2014", David Rosenberg and Jordan G. Teicher, Behold photography blog, Slate, December 26, 2014.
- ^ ANP, "Fotografiemuseum Huis Marseille vernieuwd", De Volkskrant, September 6, 2013 (in Dutch)
- ^ Huis Marseille,"Information about the house", May 19th, 2016
- ^ "Tentoonstellingen Archief". Huis Marseille. Retrieved 2022-09-14.