Warsaw opens a new modern art museum as it tries to leave Poland's
communist legacy behind
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[October 25, 2024]
By VANESSA GERA
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — The Polish capital on Friday is opening a modern
art museum designed by American architect Thomas Phifer, a minimalist
light-filled structure that meant to be a symbol of openness and
tolerance as the city tries to free itself from its communist legacy.
The Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw sits like a bright white box on a
major city street. Inside, a monumental staircase with geometric lines
rises to upper floors, where large windows flood the gallery rooms with
light.
City and museum officials say the light and open spaces are meant to
attract meetings and debate — and become a symbol of the democratic era
that Poland embraced when it threw of authoritarian communist rule 35
years ago.
Warsaw Mayor Rafał Trzaskowski said the museum's opening is a “historic
moment for Warsaw" and that the project, which will later include a
theater, would help to create a new city center no longer dominated by a
communist symbol.
“This place will change beyond recognition, it will be a completely new
center,” he said Thursday. “There has not been a place like this in
Warsaw for decades, a place that would be created from scratch precisely
to promote Polish art, which is spectacular in itself."
Warsaw was turned to rubble by occupying German forces during World War
II and was rebuilt in the grey, sometimes drab, style of communist
regimes across Eastern Europe. But years of economic growth in the
post-communist era have produced modern glass architecture, cutting-edge
museums and revitalized historic buildings.
The museum was built on the site of a former parking lot near the Palace
of Culture and Science, a dominating Stalinist skyscraper. Though long
hated by many who saw in it as a symbol of Moscow's oppression, the
ornate palace remains an icon of the city today — perhaps even the
city's most recognized building.
The museum responds with its bright white minimalism and smaller scale.
“It is very important that this building is located opposite the Palace
of Culture and Science and symbolically changes the center,” museum
director Joanna Mytkowska said. “This is a building dedicated to open,
equal and democratic culture.”
American and other Western architects are putting their mark on the
city. The city skyline includes a soaring luxury tower created by Daniel
Libeskind, the renowned Polish American architect. The firm of British
designer Norman Foster created the Varso Tower, which at 310 meters
(1,017 feet) is the tallest skyscraper in the European Union. A Finnish
architectural team designed the city's landmark Jewish history museum.
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The Museum of Modern Art in the Polish capital is seen on Thursday,
Oct. 24, 2024, in Warsaw, Poland. (AP Photo/Czarek Sokolowski)
Phifer's New York-based practice is
known in the United States for projects including the North Carolina
Museum of Art, the Corning Museum of Glass and the Glenstone Museum
expansion in Potomac, Maryland.
Asked by a reporter if he viewed the Warsaw museum as his
masterpiece, the 71-year-old did not hesitate with his answer. “Of
course,” he said.
He said from the time he began working on the museum 10 years ago,
he was aware that his work was part of Warsaw's “remarkable
renaissance.”
The city financed the 700,000 million zloty ($175 million) project.
For now it only has a few works of art on display but will
eventually hold as many as 2,500 exhibits, including the works of
top international artists. Its full opening is scheduled for
February, but the building's opening program starting Friday
features weeks of performances and other events.
The area around it is still under construction and it will
eventually become what the architect calls a “forum space” including
a garden and a theater with a black facade, also designed by Phifer.
Not everyone loves the new museum's austerity, and some residents
have compared it to a concrete bunker.
Phifer said he believes the critics will feel differently when they
enter the building and see its design and how the white background
gives space for the art “to come alive.”
“The museum is what I would call a magic box. There is a bit of
mystery to it,” he said. “You don't really understand this work
until you come inside and experience it with the art."
Trzaskowski, the mayor, said he all ambitious architectural projects
are bound to stir up emotions.
“Every large project that has been built from scratch in the world,
such as the Pompidou Centre in Paris, the Guggenheim in Bilbao or
the pyramid in the Louvre, has stirred up controversy,” Trzaskowski
said. The real controversies, he added, are only yet to come when
the avant-garde museum starts staging its exhibitions.
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