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Calouste Gulbenkian Museum

Coordinates:38°44′12″N9°9′15″W / 38.73667°N 9.15417°W /38.73667; -9.15417
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Art museum in Lisbon, Portugal
Calouste Gulbenkian Museum
Museu Calouste Gulbenkian
Map
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Established1957 (1957)
LocationLisbon, Portugal
Coordinates38°44′12″N9°9′15″W / 38.73667°N 9.15417°W /38.73667; -9.15417
Visitors413,000 (2024)[1]
FounderCalouste Gulbenkian Foundation
DirectorAntónio Filipe Pimentel
WebsiteOfficial site

TheCalouste Gulbenkian Museum houses one of the world's most important private art collections. It includes works fromAncient Egypt to the early 20th century, spanning the arts of theIslamic World,China andJapan, as well as French decorative arts. It also features the jewellery ofRené Lalique and works by some of the most important painters of all time, such asRembrandt,Monet,Rubens,Manet,Renoir,Degas andTurner. "The Gulbenkian Museum is closed for renovation until July 2026."[2]

Collection

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Portrait of an Old Man byRembrandt; 1645.
Portrait of a Young Woman;Domenico Ghirlandaio, c. 1490.

The permanent exhibition and galleries are distributed chronologically and in geographical order to create two independent circuits within the overall tour.

The first circuit highlightsGreco-Roman art fromclassical antiquity, as well as art from theancient Near East and theNile Valley. Among the artworks are ancientEgyptian,Mesopotamian,Persian,[3] andArmenian pieces, as well as Persian art from theIslamic period.

The second circuit includesEuropean art, with sections dedicated to the art of the book, sculpture, painting and thedecorative arts, particularly 18th centuryFrench art and the work ofRené Lalique. In this circuit, a wide-ranging number of pieces reflect various European artistic trends from the beginning of the 11th century to the mid-20th century. The section begins with works in ivory and illuminatedmanuscript books, followed by a selection of 15th, 16th and 17th century sculptures and paintings.Renaissance art produced in the Netherlands,Flanders, France and Italy is on display in the next room.

French 18th century decorative art has a special place in the museum, with outstanding gold and silver objects and furniture, as well as paintings and sculptures. This section is followed by galleries exhibiting a large group of paintings by the VenetianFrancesco Guardi, 18th and 19th century English paintings, and finally a superb collection of jewels and glass byRené Lalique, displayed in its own room.

Quillebeuf, Mouth of the Seine byJ.M.W. Turner, 1833

Some of the works in the collection were bought during theSoviet sale of Hermitage paintings. Of about 6000 items in the museum's collections, a selection of around 1000 is on permanent exhibition. Gulbenkian's motto was "only the best"; hence the museum has masterpieces by western European artists such asDomenico Ghirlandaio,Rubens,Rembrandt,Rodin,Carpeaux,Houdon,Renoir,Dierick Bouts,Vittore Carpaccio,Cima da Conegliano,Van Dyck,Corot,Degas,Nattier,George Romney,Stefan Lochner,Maurice-Quentin de La Tour,Édouard Manet,Henri Fantin-Latour,Claude Monet,Jean-François Millet,Sir Edward Burne-Jones,Thomas Gainsborough,Joseph Mallord William Turner,Jean-Honoré Fragonard,Giovanni Battista Moroni,Frans Hals,Ruisdael,Boucher,Largillière,Andrea della Robbia,Pisanello,Jean-Baptiste Pigalle,Antonio Rossellino,André-Charles Boulle,[4][5][6][7][8]Charles Cressent,Oeben,Riesener,Antoine-Sébastien Durand,Charles Spire,Jean Deforges,François-Thomas Germain.

Gulbenkian's Centro de Arte Moderna (CAM) also actively commissions and collects works to add to its holdings, today numbering 12,000 pieces.[9]

History

[edit]
TheFrench furniture collection.

Vasco Maria Eugénio de Almeida acquired part of the Parque de Santa Gertrudes, in April 1957, for the construction of the Foundation buildings and public/private park. Two years later, a competition was launched for a project to construct the organization's headquarters.[10] It was eventually won by the team that included architects Alberto J. Pessoa, Pedro Cid and Ruy Jervis d'Athouguia (1917-2006), in addition to the landscaping architects António Viana Barreto andGonçalo Ribeiro Telles, who were responsible for designing the park surrounding the building.[10][11] Later, Francisco Caetano Keil do Amaral was added to the team, as a consultant, and Frederico Henrique George joined the team working on the building.[10][11]

In December 1961, the anterior project of the park was begun, while work on the earthworks and retaining walls beginning the following year.[10] A sculpture panel was installed in the headquarters building by architect Artur Rosa in 1962.[10] By 1967, the interior finishing were adjudicated, with the project concluded in 1968. On 2 October 1969, the buildings and gardens were inaugurated.[10]

Madame Monet lisant byPierre-Auguste Renoir; 1874.
Gulbenkian Modern Art Centre.

The 12th International Federation of Landscaping Architects Congress was held in September 1970 on the grounds of the Gulbenkian Foundation. In 1975, the property was distinguished with the Valmor Prize.[10][11]

After 21 years of acquisitions, more than three years of construction and a lively controversy generated by conservationists, Gulbenkian's Centro de Arte Moderna (CAM) was opened in 1983 as Portugal's first museum of modern art.[12] In 2024, CAM re-opened after a €58 million redevelopment.[13]

Architecture

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The museum was designed as a showcase for the collection, which was relatively unique for an art museum at a time when most museums were housed in buildings originally built for other purposes.[14] The landscaping and museum building interact, with views into woods and wetlands punctuating the artwork on display, while woodland paths offer views of the dramatic building, the edges of which include terraces and water features that blur the border between built and natural environment. The grouped buildings are set within a park bordered by theAvenida de Berna (north),Avenida António Augusto de Aguiar (west),Rua Marquês de Sá da Bandeira (east) and theCentro de Arte Moderna (south).[10]

The shape of the museum and headquarters is relatively simple, with T-shaped wings, each with an entrance.[11] The massive volume, long and horizontal was used for administration, services and as auditoriums, off of the main, single entry space.[11] It is in this entrance that the panelComeçar, byAlmada Negreiros is situated.[11]

Designed by the British architectLeslie Martin, CAM's original building has been a three-story structure with a vast single-room gallery consisting of interconnecting floors; movable panels provide for maximum flexibility in arranging exhibits.[15] The 2024 redevelopment of CAM was carried out byKengo Kuma and Associates. The most prominent addition is a 100m-long entrance canopy clad in dark planks of ash with handmade white tiles on top, based on the Japaneseengawa. The architects also moved the main entrance of the museum from north to south.[16]

Directors

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See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^Lee Cheshire and Elena Goukassian (1 April 2025),The world’s most-visited museums 2024: normality returns—for some The Art Newspaper.
  2. ^Calouste Gulbenkian Museum website
  3. ^Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian (1972)
  4. ^"Death of André-Charles Boulle". Mercure de France. March 1732.
  5. ^"The French cabinetmaker who is generally considered to be the preeminent artist in the field of marquetry, even "the most remarkable of all French cabinetmakers."". Google Arts and Culture.[dead link]
  6. ^"Masters of marquetry in the 17th century: Boulle". Khanacademy. Archived fromthe original on 2020-03-08. Retrieved2017-11-30.
  7. ^"André-Charles Boulle - Inlay". Pinterest.
  8. ^Theodore Dell,The Frick Collection, V: Furniture in the Frick Collection (1992:187).
  9. ^José da Silva (18 November 2024),Lisbon’s museum scene booms as new and revamped institutions are unveiled The Art Newspaper.
  10. ^abcdefghBandeira, Filomena (1998), SIPA (ed.),Sede e Museu da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian / Centro de Arte Moderna (IPA.00007810/PT031106230480) (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: SIPA – Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico, retrieved16 February 2016
  11. ^abcdefIGESPAR, ed. (2010),Edifício-Sede e Parque da Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: IGESPAR - Instituto de Gestão do Património Arquitectónico e Arqueológico, retrieved16 February 2016
  12. ^John Darnton (17 August 1983),New Lisbon museum a home for modernists New York Times.
  13. ^José da Silva (18 November 2024),Lisbon’s museum scene booms as new and revamped institutions are unveiled The Art Newspaper.
  14. ^"One Man's Treasures".New York Times. 19 February 1984. Retrieved20 August 2019.
  15. ^John Darnton (17 August 1983),New Lisbon museum a home for modernists New York Times.
  16. ^José da Silva (18 November 2024),Lisbon’s museum scene booms as new and revamped institutions are unveiled The Art Newspaper.
  17. ^Tim Cornwell (30 October 2017),Former Tate Britain director Penelope Curtis remaps Lisbon's Gulbenkian The Art Newspaper.
  18. ^Loos, Ted."At the Frick, a Young Painter Spars With an Old Master"The New York Times, August 28, 2025.

Sources

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  • Correia, Graça (2013),Ruy D'Athouguia (in Portuguese), Aveleda, Portugal: Verso da História
  • Guia de Arquitectura (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal, 1994{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Leite, Ana Cristina (1988),Arquitectura Premiada em Lisboa. Prémio Valmor - Prémio Municipal de Arquitectura (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa
  • Pedreirinho, José Manuel (1994),Dicionário de arquitectos activos em Portugal do Séc. I à actualidade (in Portuguese), Porto, Portugal: Edições Afrontamento
  • PDM - Plano Director Municipal (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Câmara Municipal de Lisboa, 1995
  • Relatório da Actividade do Ministério no Ano de 1961 (in Portuguese), vol. 2, Lisbon, Portugal: Ministério das Obras Públicas, 1962
  • Sede da Fundação Gulbenkian declarada Edifício Saudável (in Portuguese), Lisbon, Portugal: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2008
  • Tostões, Ana (1997),Os Verdes Anos na Arquitectura Portuguesa dos Anos 50 (in Portuguese), Porto, Portugal: Faculdade de Arquitetura da Universidade do Porto
  • Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, ed. (1972),Persian Art: Calouste Gulbenkian Collection, Lisbon, Portugal: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian

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