Prékopa Ágnes (szerk.): Ars Decorativa 29. (Budapest, 2013)

Imre TAKÁCS: The Upgrade Programme for the Budapest Museum of Applied Arts

10. Glass cabinets with Hab an ceramics, Museum of Applied Arts, 2014 set of associations. They will find them­selves travelling along cultural routes, and will clearly perceive the crossroads and in­tersections. The exercise of these choices of how they view the exhibits will give visi­tors a different dimension of experience: the sense of artistic freedom. An illustrative example is the three-way fork in the pas­sageways of the south wing, where the great sources of late-19'h-century inspira­tion meet with their consequences: Euro­pean historicism, Far Eastern art and fin- de-si'ecle art nouveau. The size and the composition of the mu­seum’s collections would be suited to per­manent exhibitions embracing the entire sweep of art history and culture from the early Middle Ages to the late 20lh century, and from America to Japan, in sections structured around historical and civilisa- tional contexts. If we took this route, how­ever, we could put no more than 5% of the 200,000 items (including graphics and his­toric photographs) on display. To fulfil the requirement that the museum should give a full insight into the design and making of objects, we must come up with a way of rendering the remainder of the material ac­cessible. We thus turned to the logical solu­tion, following the example of the Victoria and Albert Museum, of supplementing high visual-impact era-based exhibitions with dense displays of art objects in “visible storage”. This means providing satisfactory conditions for displaying all of the art ob­jects in the museum’s collections, except those whose conservation requirements preclude their permanent exhibition. Each collection is grouped by material. Arranged in logical order, the greater part of the col­lection will be visible here, packed closely in shelved cabinets (ceramics, metalwork, and clocks) or placed in automatically con­trolled drawers and browsable holders (lace, fans, embroidery, graphics). Designed to hold nearly 50,000 pieces in dense ar­rays, the visible storage units do not lend themselves to the use of individual labels, and to be really useful will require the ap­plication of computer database techniques. The overwhelming mass of objects in the visible storage units, fitted out with IT de­vices, will itself be a visual experience, but their real usefulness will be measured in the public talks held there, the educational pro­grammes designed around them, and spon­taneous services provided to university stu­dents, collectors, art dealers and the whole interested public (Fig. 10-11). 11. Cabinets with drawers of embroidery from the Middle Ages, Museum of Applied Arts, 2014 16

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