Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Vitra Schaudepot
Museum on the Vitra Campus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
The Vitra Schaudepot is a museum on the Vitra Campus in Weil am Rhein, Germany.[1] It was designed by Herzog & de Meuron and opened in the summer of 2016.[2] It displays modern furniture pieces by Charles and Ray Eames, and other designers, from the Vitra Design Museum's collection, as well as part of the Barragán Archive, and numerous limited-time exhibitions.[3] It also has a café and shop.[4][5]
Remove ads
History
The Vitra Schaudepot was imagined as a museum space to showcase much of the Vitra Design Museum's collection, totaling over 7,000 pieces, while the latter building, designed by Frank Gehry, was used for temporary exhibitions.[6] Designed by Swiss architecture firm Herzog & de Meuron, the building is made of bricks, with a gabled roof, and bears an industrial appearance kept from the old factory building before, with expansive interiors for both permanent and temporary setups.[7][8][9]
The museum opened on June 3, 2016 and displayed a permanent exhibition of over 400 pieces of modern furniture while also hosting a temporary exhibition dedicated to "radical design" from the sixties and seventies led by Italian designers.[2][10] Many of the pieces, from the Vitra Design Museum's collection, had never been publicly accessible before then.[11]
Remove ads
Exhibitions
The Vitra Schaudepot's first temporary exhibition, in 2016, was Radical Design, a show dedicated to Italian designers from the avant-garde movement of the sixties and seventies such as Guido Rocco and Piero Gilardi. It was curated by Heng Zhi.[12]
From 2016–2017, the Vitra Schaudepot displayed Dieter Rams: Modular World, an exhibition on the furniture and appliances of Dieter Rams, also curated by Zhi.[13]
In 2017, the works of Ettore Sottsass were displayed in the exhibition, Ettore Sottsass–Rebel and Poet, which included furniture, products, photographs, and documents from the Italian designer.[14]

From May 2022 to May 2023, Dutch designer Sabine Marcelis reorganized the Vitra Design Museum's archive entirely by color for an exhibition titled Color Rush.[15] Each color was placed on its own translucent shelving in order to produce strong contrasts between one another.[16]
In 2024, the Vitra Schaudepot debuted a temporary exhibition showcasing sci-fi design, titled Science Fiction Design: From Space Age to Metaverse.[17] It ran until May 11, 2025.[18]
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads