Celebrity curators creating mini museums for Dutch railway stations
POSTED 07 Jul 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Television presenter Floortje Dessing was the first celebrity to debut a collection, opening her exhibition on platform 8/9b of Leiden central station last month
Waiting rooms at railway stations across the Netherlands are being converted into temporary mini museums in an effort to promote the National Museum of World Culture’s vast unseen collections.
The National Museum of World Cultures – made up of the Tropenmuseum, Africa Museum and Museum of Ethnology – commissioned the project. The three institutions, which since 2014 have acted as one museum on three sites, jointly manage a collection of more than 375,000 objects, with the bulk stored in an underground facility off-limits to the general public.
Showcasing some of the collection they asked five Dutch celebrities to choose their favourite artefacts, which will go on display at the temporary installations.
Television presenter Floortje Dessing was the first celebrity to debut a collection, opening her exhibition on platform 8/9b of Leiden central station last month. Floortje’s museum will be open until 23 July and contains a collection of treasures of the sea, selected by the presenter because the island life in the South Pacific made the most impression on her during her travels.
“When I was asked to take part in a project like this, the only answer I could give was ‘yes’,” said Dessing. "It’s great that we can present the collection in a very special way, offering easy access to a much larger audience.”
The mini museums are free to visit, as they double as waiting rooms, and are open seven days a week from 6AM to midnight.
Following on from Dessing’s museum, singer Kenny B, street soccer player and rapper Soufiane Touzani, presenter Filemon Wesselink and cookbook writer Yvette van Boven will open their own installations at stations in Arnhem, Utrecht, Zwolle and Amsterdam, with each lasting a month.
Dutch design firm NorthernLight are creating the installations, with engineering and production by Bruns BV.
The collections are made up from artefacts stored in an underground facility by the National Museum of World Cultures
The pop ups will be on display for a month, before the next installation opens at a different station
Dutch design firm NorthernLight are creating the installations, with engineering and production by Bruns BV
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Celebrity curators creating mini museums for Dutch railway stations
POSTED 07 Jul 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Television presenter Floortje Dessing was the first celebrity to debut a collection, opening her exhibition on platform 8/9b of Leiden central station last month
Waiting rooms at railway stations across the Netherlands are being converted into temporary mini museums in an effort to promote the National Museum of World Culture’s vast unseen collections.
The National Museum of World Cultures – made up of the Tropenmuseum, Africa Museum and Museum of Ethnology – commissioned the project. The three institutions, which since 2014 have acted as one museum on three sites, jointly manage a collection of more than 375,000 objects, with the bulk stored in an underground facility off-limits to the general public.
Showcasing some of the collection they asked five Dutch celebrities to choose their favourite artefacts, which will go on display at the temporary installations.
Television presenter Floortje Dessing was the first celebrity to debut a collection, opening her exhibition on platform 8/9b of Leiden central station last month. Floortje’s museum will be open until 23 July and contains a collection of treasures of the sea, selected by the presenter because the island life in the South Pacific made the most impression on her during her travels.
“When I was asked to take part in a project like this, the only answer I could give was ‘yes’,” said Dessing. "It’s great that we can present the collection in a very special way, offering easy access to a much larger audience.”
The mini museums are free to visit, as they double as waiting rooms, and are open seven days a week from 6AM to midnight.
Following on from Dessing’s museum, singer Kenny B, street soccer player and rapper Soufiane Touzani, presenter Filemon Wesselink and cookbook writer Yvette van Boven will open their own installations at stations in Arnhem, Utrecht, Zwolle and Amsterdam, with each lasting a month.
Dutch design firm NorthernLight are creating the installations, with engineering and production by Bruns BV.
The collections are made up from artefacts stored in an underground facility by the National Museum of World Cultures
The pop ups will be on display for a month, before the next installation opens at a different station
Dutch design firm NorthernLight are creating the installations, with engineering and production by Bruns BV
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NorthernLight completes design for Sochi's Sirius Art and Science Park POSTED 05 Jul 2017. BY Tom Anstey Dutch design agency NorthernLight has completed the design phase for the redevelopment
of Sochi’s Olympic Village, which is turning its former media centre from the 2014 Winter
Olympics into a science and art park.
Sochi Olympic Village being transformed into science and arts hub POSTED 02 Feb 2017. BY Tom Anstey Dutch design agency NorthernLight is working on the redevelopment of Sochi’s Olympic
Vilage, which is turning its former media centre from the 2014 Winter Olympics into a
science and art park.
NorthernLight reveals details of Experimenta’s new science galleries POSTED 13 Dec 2016. BY Alice Davis Dutch design agency NorthernLight is working on a wide range of hands-on exhibits and
science and art installations as part of the high-profile expansion at Experimenta science
centre in Heilbronn, Germany.
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fast approaching its official opening date of 28 October.
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cultural campus that combines expanded exhibition spaces with learning, performance,
hospitality and public programming.
A US$50 million (£44.2 million, €51.2 million) transformation of Chicago's historic McCormick
Mansion has created a new destination that combines live magic, immersive theatre, dining and
private membership under one roof.
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Center, a US$107 million (£79 million, €92 million) destination that combines immersive
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