Museums Throw Open the Storage Rooms, Letting In the Public
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/18/arts/design/museum-storage.html Version 0 of 1. ROTTERDAM, the Netherlands — Sjarel Ex stood in the basement of the Boijmans van Beuningen Museum, ankle-deep in rising waters, facing a Sophie’s choice. Rotterdam’s fire chief had told him that the paintings collection would be destroyed within 30 minutes unless Mr. Ex, a co-director of the museum, gave permission to sandbag the library, sacrificing the books. In the end, the art was saved and only a couple hundred volumes lost. But the 2013 event catalyzed Mr. Ex’s campaign to move the museum’s collection. “From that moment on, we were not so very polite about the need to have a new storage facility,” he said. He fought for this as part of a plan to close the 1935 museum for renovations, which were already under discussion. But rather than building a fortified “black box” somewhere in the outskirts of Rotterdam, Mr. Ex said he saw an opportunity to do something “radical” by opening the museum’s storage to the public while the main building was closed. “The first plans were that maybe 20 or 40 percent would be accessible,” Mr. Ex said. “At a certain moment, we said, ‘Why don’t we make it entirely accessible?’” Six years later, the museum is spending nearly 85 million euros, or about $95 million, on the Depot Boijmans van Beuningen, a glittering, mirrored building that Mr. Ex calls “Noah’s Ark.” Designed by MVRDV architects, the storage center is in the city center, right next to the museum. The main building is closed for a €234 million renovation of its own, set to reopen in late 2025; the Depot will remain. When it is completed in 2021, the Depot will contain the museum’s entire collection of 151,000 artworks, as well as curators’ offices, conservation studios, a movie theater, a restaurant and a rooftop garden. Visitors will be able to walk among the storage racks and pull out items, accompanied by guides and guards. Mr. Ex hopes it will attract 150,000 to 250,000 people a year. The Depot is a leap forward for Rotterdam, but, perhaps more significantly, it also represents a shift in thinking about the public’s access to everything an institution owns. Mr. Ex estimated that about 6 or 7 percent of most major museum holdings are on view at any moment. As museum collections have grown increasingly vast in the last several decades, institutions worldwide are seeking to balance two primary mandates: protecting and preserving collections, and sharing as much as possible with the public. The plans for the Depot have drawn officials from museums in Finland, Norway, South Korea and Sweden to Rotterdam, curious to view it as a model, said Ina Klaassen, the Boijmans’s other co-director. In Paris, the museums along the Seine that are vulnerable to flooding — including the Louvre, the Musée d’Orsay and the Musée du Quai Branly — are considering storage solutions that may be partly open to the public, but no plan has been approved. (Officials from Paris have visited to look at Rotterdam’s plans.) The Victoria and Albert Museum in London is following close on the heels of the Boijmans Depot, with its V&A East storage facility expected to open in 2023. The new space will house some 250,000 objects and 1,000 separate archives, which visitors can explore in person during self-guided tours over 60 or 90 minutes. Tim Reeve, the strategic leader of the project, said V&A East would be “an endlessly changing cabinet of curiosities” from the collection of furniture, fashion, textiles and art. He said that visitors could also learn from curators how exhibitions are planned and watch conservators at work. Other museums have taken small steps toward open access, with so-called “visible storage.” The Henry Luce Foundation has supported “open study” centers at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington and at the Brooklyn Museum that allow visitors to see works in storage, usually in curated displays that can be seen only through glass walls. In October, the Pompidou Center in Paris said that it would build a new depot in the city’s suburbs. The center will be “partly open to the public, so that it can benefit from a new type of contact with the work,” the museum said in a statement. The Louvre-Lens, a satellite the national museum, in northern France, also has visible storage, with changing collections that can be seen through glass. Visitors can enter the storage facility by appointment. Mr. Reeve, a deputy director of the V&A, said that the museum wanted to “move the dial” with its new facility. “The idea is really to take down the glass wherever possible, take down the barriers wherever possible, and really allow the visitors to dictate the level of access,” he said. “It’s not just an architectural model, or a logistics move,” he added. “It’s a cultural change.” On a recent tour of the Boijmans Depot construction site, Mr. Ex pointed out the crisscrossing staircases that will eventually lead visitors to exhibition rooms and curators’ studios, and structures that will eventually hold glass display vitrines. He noted proudly that the storage rooms start around 20 feet above sea level — an important consideration in the Netherlands, which is particularly vulnerable to flooding. (He hopes the design will eliminate hard decisions at the last minute.) Cranes hovered over the building’s exterior, while workmen placed mirrored glass plates onto the facade. Reflected on the surface were the main museum building and Rotterdam’s wider cityscape. “It’s all about the public,” Mr. Ex said, as if the symbolism weren’t strong enough. “Bringing the outside in.” |