Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Kunstmuseum Stuttgart

48°46′42″N 9°10′40″E / 48.77833°N 9.17778°E / 48.77833; 9.17778

Glass facade of Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
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Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
  
Kunstmuseum Stuttgart

The Kunstmuseum Stuttgart is a contemporary and modern art museum in Stuttgart, Germany, built and opened in 2005.

Description

The cubic museum building with 5000 m2 of display space was designed by Berlin architects Hascher and Jehle. During the day it looks like a glass cube, and at nights the interior lighted limestone walls become visible.

Collection

The Kunstmuseum Stuttgart museum's collection comes from the previous "Galerie der Stadt Stuttgart". The city's collection goes back to a gift from the Marchese Silvio della Valle di Casanova in 1924.

It contains one of the most important collections of the work of Otto Dix and also works from Willi Baumeister, Adolf Hölzel, Dieter Roth, and others.

Construction History

The site now occupied by the cubic structure of the new Kunstmuseum was once home to the ruins of the Kronprinzenpalais, which had been damaged during an air raid in 1944. The Kronprinzenpalais had served as an urban counterpart to the Wilhelmspalais at the opposite end of the Planie. After the ruins were demolished in 1963, the Planie was redeveloped into a six-lane road with four additional tunnels designed for both cars and trams. [1]

To make crossing in the Königstraße easier for pedestrians, the stair-like Kleine Schloßplatz was constructed in 1968. However, it never fully met its intended purpose and was not widely embraced. For years, discussions revolved around demolishing the structure, as it was seen as unnecessary, especially after the surface-level street had been covered again. The construction of the new Kunstmuseum after the year 2000 filled this gap in the urban landscape next to the Königsbau along Königstraße. [1]

Management

The first director of the Kunstmuseum Stuttgart, Marion Ackermann, became the director of the Kunstsammlung NRW in Düsseldorf in 2009. Ulrike Groos, former director of the Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, took over the leadership of the Kunstmuseum in 2010. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Geschichte | Kunstmuseum Stuttgart". www.kunstmuseum-stuttgart.de (in German). Retrieved 2024-12-18.
  2. ^ "History | Kunstmuseum Stuttgart". www.kunstmuseum-stuttgart.de. Retrieved 2024-12-19.