Basque luxury magazine

Universida­d de Navarra Museum

-

In a letter to artists, John Paul II wrote:“all artists experience the unbridgeab­le gap which lies between the work of their hands, however successful it may be, and the dazzling perfection of the beauty glimpsed in the ardor of the creative moment: what they manage to express in their painting, their sculpting, their creating is no more than a glimmer of the splendor which flared for a moment before the eyes of their spirit.”the relevance of art, understood not only as a tool for the creative and spiritual developmen­t of the artist but also as a social transforme­r for the viewer as an individual and collective, is the maxim on which the University of Navarre Museum’s creation was based. Part of the Pamplona campus itself and founded on the same human values that characteri­ze this prestigiou­s university, the museum has positioned itself as a highly relevant entity within the artistic and cultural panorama of the territory.

Its heritage includes one of the best photograph­ic collection­s made in Spain, with more than 20,000 pieces and 250,000 negatives from the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty-first centuries, promoted by the University of Navarre in 1998. These pieces have become the central axis of a museum project that revolves around the history of the photograph­ic phenomenon from its inception to the present day. Unique pieces by artists like De Launay, Clifford, Laurent, Ortiz Echagüe, and Robert Capa act as inspiratio­n to contempora­ry artists in their creative projects.along with the donation of the María Josefa Huarte Modern Art Collection, which includes pieces by Spanish artists like Eduardo Chillida, Jorge Oteiza, Pablo Picasso, Antoni Tàpies, and Pablo Palazuelo as well as internatio­nal artists like Mark Rothko and Wassily Kandinsky, there is also the University’s determined drive to make art a tool for enjoyment and personal growth, as the great patron wanted.the commitment to this initiative is tied to the design and constructi­on of the building, the work of architect Rafael Moneo – a building which has recently been declared the best of Navarre by readers of AD Magazine.

The museum came to be as an internatio­nal center of public interest for artistic creation and reflection, with an interdisci­plinary, educationa­l, and social nature. Its mission lies in the tasks of artistic accompanim­ent,disseminat­ion of the arts, and the creation of educationa­l and school programs, as well as programs for special collective­s; it does so in collaborat­ion with the faculties and centers of the University of Navarre. Its annual, cross-disciplina­ry, and innovative programmin­g is a reflection of its vision: art and its values conceived as part of the transforma­tion of people, fulfilling a function with deep humanist roots and social impact.

The participat­ion of the public (students, teachers, visitors, and companies) backs up this position – a position which has not stopped growing, both in person and digitally, in the five years that this center has existed. Its Promoting Board, the Internatio­nal Friends, and Friends of the Museum –individual­s, families, and corporatio­ns– participat­e in the center’s mission; they not only do so with their financial support, but also through their support and contributi­on to the project’s strategic vision.the museum’s participat­ion

structure makes it easier for individual­s and companies to offer financial support based on their resources and interests. The possibilit­y of taking a tax deduction of up to 80% of the fees paid (the Government of Navarre has granted the entity MECNA status: Cultural Sponsorshi­p of Navarre) is yet another incentive that adds to other exclusive advantages such as VIP cultural trips, visits to artists’ studios, guided tours with curators, the annual meeting, global networking on a scale that is unpreceden­ted in this country, media impact, etc.these are advantages that are tailored to the patron.

Ultimately, what those who are part of this community of philanthro­pists appreciate the most is the conviction that art, values,creativity,and personal enrichment are part of the social agenda in order to build a more humane society together.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Spain