Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Designmuseum Denmark

Art museum in Copenhagen From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Designmuseum Denmarkmap
Remove ads

The Designmuseum Denmark (Danish: Designmuseum Danmark) is a museum in Copenhagen for Danish and international design and crafts. It features works of famous Danish designers like Arne Jacobsen, Jacob Jensen and Kaare Klint, who was one of the two architects who remodeled the former Frederiks Hospital (built 1752–57) into a museum in the 1920s. The exhibition also features a variety of Chinese and German porcelain.

Quick Facts Established, Location ...
Thumb
Ticket-pin
Thumb
The courtyard in front of the museum by night
Thumb
Danish Design Museum
Thumb
Famous chairs exhibition at Danish Design Museum.

The museum was known as the Danish Museum of Art & Design (Danish: Kunstindustrimuseet) until 2011[1] and known as the Danish Museum of Decorative Art prior.

Remove ads

History

The museum was founded in 1890 at the initiative of, among others, Industriforeningen. A purpose-built building designed by Vilhelm Klein and located next to Industriforeningen's premises on City Hall Square was completed in 1894 and opened to the public the following year. The exhibitions were housed in separate galleries, each dedicated to a particular field such as porcelain, faience, silver, furniture, glass and textiles. This arrangement reflected the primary aim of the museum which was to serve as a source of inspiration for craftspeople and manufacturers by highlighting the very best in build quality and design from different ages.[2]

In 1926 the museum moved to its current building, the defunct Frederick's Hospital from 1757, a gift from the banker Emil Glückstadt. The architects Kaare Klint and Ivar Bentsen had undertaken the necessary alterations and furnishings.[2]

Remove ads

Library and archives

Thumb
The Kaare Klint-designed reading room

The museum is home to the largest library in Scandinavia dedicated to decorative arts and industrial design.[3] Open to the general public, the library is at once a museum library, research library, and Danish central library within its field. Opening hours are TuesdayFriday from 1117. The library contains more than 1,000 journals. The latest issues of the 75 journals and magazines which the museum subscribes to can be read in the library's reading room.[4]

The reading room of the library hosts public lectures on design-related topics which draw upon the collections in both the museum and the library.[5]

The Danish Design Archive and the Poster Collection are located on the museum's first floor.

Remove ads

Furnitureindex

Designmuseum Denmark hosts the Furnitureindex, an online database of Danish furniture from the 20th and 21st centuries. The database is in English and contains over 12,000 records.[6] The database was founded in 2000 by Marilyn and Reese Palley as the Palley Index Of Danish Furniture: 1900-2000.[7] Designmuseum Denmark made the database publicly available online in 2003 after it was acquired by the Realdania Foundation.[6]

Auditorium

The museum has a small auditorium on the first floor seating 120 people. It is rented out for lectures, concerts, receptions and other events.[8]

Cultural references

In the first Olsen Gang film, Bredgade 68 is where the Olsen Gang steals the golden statue.[9]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads