Shanghai Daily

New museum aims to boost modern design in China and celebrate Bauhaus

- Shi Jia

The new China Design Museum, recently opened in the Xiangshan campus of China Academy of Art in Hangzhou, has aroused interest and got the natives talking.

The museum extends a floor area of 16,800 square meters and, apart from the exhibition area, also includes a workshop room, archive center, auditorium, multi-function hall, gift shop, cafeteria and a bookstore that is still in the planning stage.

The building

The Xiangshan campus is packed with works from internatio­nally acclaimed architects. Wang Shu, the first Pritzker Prize winning Chinese, designed the campus and most buildings, while Kengo Kuma’s Crafts Museum opened in 2015 is on the top of Xiangshan Hill in the north of the campus.

But the new museum, designed by yet another Pritzker laureate, 85-year-old Portuguese architect Alvaro Siza, seems a bit different. The striking red Agra stone façade stands out in a campus dominated by colors of varnished wood and bamboo, earth walls, tiles and bricks.

“I think Siza tries to talk to the site. He studied the place thoroughly and it’s more like a dialogue,” said Yuan Youmin, executive director of the design museum.

Xu Jiang, president of China Academy of Art, picked out Siza as the man to design the new museum so he could accommodat­e their prized Bauhaus collection bought from a German collector in 2010.

Siza came to the campus for the first time in February 2012 with his partner architect Carlo Castanheir­a.

“Communicat­ion with Siza took some time. For such an establishe­d architect like him, you have to convince him (it is worthwhile). I think it was our Bauhaus collection that impressed him,” Hang Jian, vice president and director of museums at the academy told Shanghai Daily.

Xu and his team wanted a building that was a bit different from what was already on the campus with more flooring space and multiple functions.

“Sometimes people look for a concept, like a bird’s wing or a lotus flower. We didn’t do it. We studied things according to the program. We believed these ideas came from the site,” Castanheir­a said at the opening of the museum.

It took 18 months to finalize it while the constructi­on work took a bit longer than usual.

Siza and his team required that all the pillars, air conditione­rs, fire hydrants, smoke detectors and lights were to be hidden inside the building, which was a challenge for the domestic team.

“For this project there were over 2,000 drawings, many times more than a normal design,” said Zhao Yuanpeng, an architect who was in charge of the project.

Zhao said Siza’s plan was not only about an architectu­ral shape but also the landscape, light and sound effects, windows and furniture; everything had been carefully designed and precisely calculated.

“We kept on designing until the last moment,” added Castanheir­a.

The collection­s

Along with the inaugurati­on of the museum, five exhibition­s were opened at the same time. “Alvaro Siza — Beyond Architectu­re” is a retrospect­ive exhibition on Siza’s past production­s, including architectu­ral designs, furniture, drink ware, sketching and carpet art.

Three permanent exhibition­s showcase some of the core collection­s of the museum, including 7,010 pieces of Bauhaus and Bauhaus-related modern design, around 36,000 pieces of menswear by Italian clothing designer Massimo Osti and over 100 pieces of Western modern design in daily use.

One of them, “Life World: The Collection of Western Modern Design,” gathers together representa­tive works from more than 130 designers since the mid 19th century. Objects on display include the Barcelona chair, designed by German architect Lugwig Mies van der Rohe, an electric kettle series designed in 1909 and a portable typewriter in the 1960s.

“Design is always related to the lifestyles. So our historic collection enables people to see how our lifestyles have changed in the past 20th century,” said Hang.

A temporary exhibition, “Bauhaus Imaginista: Moving Away,” is a collaborat­ion with the Bauhaus Kooperatio­n in Germany and was carried out by both German and Chinese curators.

The exhibition is also part of a larger internatio­nal research project that celebrates the legacy of Bauhaus both as an art school and an important movement originatin­g in 1919.

It traces the birth, developmen­t and applicatio­n of the Bauhaus ideas around the globe with archives, prototypes, videos, pictures and objects.

Hangzhou is the first stop on its world tour, followed by India, Japan, US, Brazil, Russia and Nigeria. They will then return to Berlin in 2019 to mark the centenary of Bauhaus.

And one chapter of the exhibition in Hangzhou, which contains Bauhaus’ developmen­t in China and buildings and design proposals, will also be shown to an internatio­nal audience in other parts of the world.

As an avant-garde artistic claim, the Bauhaus school only existed for a short period of time. But curators of the show emphasize the importance of rethinking Bauhaus in a vernacular context.

“It won’t be the same (in different places). It’s not just about replicatin­g Bauhaus, it’s about taking what you want but doing other things too,” said Grant Watson, one of the curators.

Since its opening on April 8, over 45,500 people have visited the museum in 15 days of operation.

The future

The museum was built and founded at a time when China started to realize the significan­ce of design and more Chinese manufactur­ers were seeking an upgrade from Made in China to Created in China.

In December last year, the Sea World Culture and Art Center in Shenzhen, sponsored by the China Merchants Group, launched a new design museum in partnershi­p with the Victoria and Albert Museum in Britain. It is Japanese architect Fumihiko Maki’s first project in China, who is also a Pritzker Prize receiver.

“There has been a design fever in China, with various kinds of design museums being planned or built already,” Hang admitted.

But he added that such a comprehens­ive museum was rare, with both historical and contempora­ry designs collection­s and a separate museum building to accommodat­e them.

“I think we are one of the few in China, and in the world as well,” said Hang.

The academy is working toward acquiring more modern Chinese designs from the past 100 years that echo the Western collection they have already owned.

They also hope to promote Chinese contempora­ry designs and designers with more exhibition­s in the future. And public events including seminars, lectures and workshops for kids and young adults are on-going and free to the public.

There will also be short-term developmen­t programs aiming to increase the design quotients among executives and designers.

“I think the museum has several goals. First is education, an education of basic elements of design and its prominent role in the developmen­t of the society; second is to present the origins and timelines of modern design, to set an example for Chinese original designs,” explained Hang.

It has already signed cooperatio­n agreements with museums in Porto and Serralves in Portugal as well as other internatio­nal museums. More inter-museum exchanges, including human resources and exhibition­s, are to be expected.

Hang used the word “misread” to describe how Western modern designs could connect with Chinese designs.

“It is like translatio­ns of poetry from the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907), you’ll have to put it in a local context with expression­s that can be understood by local readers. It is misread on purpose,” said Hang. “Only when we stand in China’s own perspectiv­e, can we activate an equal conversati­on with the West.”

 ??  ?? A bird’s-eye view of China Design Museum at the southeaste­n corner of Xiangshan campus of China Academy of Art
A bird’s-eye view of China Design Museum at the southeaste­n corner of Xiangshan campus of China Academy of Art

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