October 17, 2007
Tschumi’s hope for reunification of the Marbles in the New Acropolis Museum
In this Interview, the architect of the New Acropolis Museum, Bernard Tschumi talks about his intentions for the building.
From:
Christian Science Monitor
Acropolis Museum: missing the marbles
The Parthenon, or Elgin, Marbles are in Britain. Greeks see the new museum as further reason for their return.
By Nicole Itano | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
from the October 16, 2007 edition“I’m probably one of the only architects who realized that they are a narrative, a story,” says Mr. Tschumi. “My hope and probably my goal is that one day the marbles will be reunited and people can know the story all at once, in one single place, within the architecture.”
The British Museum says that there is still an important reason to keep some of the marbles in England. Only there, it argues, can the marbles be shown in a global context, next to artifacts from other contemporary civilizations as well as those that were inspired by Athenian democracy and Greek civilization.
“The very purpose of the British Museum is to present a unique overview of world civilization, and the Parthenon Marbles are an integral part of that,” says Hannah Boulton, a spokesperson for the museum.But supporters of the return now believe that the question now is when, not if, the marbles will be returned.
“If you ask people, will they have them back in 100 years, they would say for sure. In 50 years? I would have thought that overwhelmingly likely. Twenty years? That’s more doubtful,” says Snodgrass. “The problem at the moment is that there’s not yet a really serious dialogue going on.”
- When the marbles return… : October 20, 2007
- Do Athenians like the New Acropolis Museum? : October 17, 2007
- New Acropolis Museum designer to lecture in London : October 8, 2005
- Treasures on the move to the New Acropolis Museum : October 9, 2007
- Demolition of old building for New Acropolis Museum opposed : July 22, 2007
- Keeping the Elgin Marbles in London is now untenable : June 17, 2009
- More delays for New Acropolis Museum : April 15, 2004
- Greek Prime Minister tours New Acropolis Museum site : October 10, 2006