June 21, 2009
New home for the Parthenon Sculptures unveiled in Athens
Further coverage of the grand opening of the New Acropolis Museum. Predictably the British Museum is taking a defensive approach, choosing to try & negate any benefit of the new museum rather than congratulating Greece on this achievement.
From:
ABC News (Australia)
Greece unveils new home for marbles
Posted Sat Jun 20, 2009 1:34pm AEST
Updated Sun Jun 21, 2009 10:23am AESTA new museum has opened in Athens, with a special gallery in it for the Elgin Marbles.
The marbles are Greek sculptures that were part of the Parthenon, but have been held in London’s British Museum for nearly 200 years.
Greece held a lavish opening ceremony, attended by foreign heads of state and government, hoping it would reinforce its claim for the return of almost half the stunning 160-metre frieze of a religious procession.The 2,500-year-old sculptures were prised off the Acropolis walls in the early 1800s for Britain’s diplomat Lord Elgin and he sold them to the British Museum where they remain.
Authorities in Greece are urging the museum in London to give them back what they say is rightfully theirs.
But despite the call, the British museum spokesman, Hannah Boulton, says the sculptures do not belong to Greece.
“They are now museum objects,” she said.
“They are objects of world art and as such … there is no problem with them being divided between two different museums and telling two different but complimentary stories.”
– ABC/AAP
From:
Swissinfo
June 20, 2009 – 6:23 PM
Athens celebrates Tschumi’s Acropolis museumAthens has celebrated the opening of the new Acropolis museum, the culmination of many years’ work by the internationally renowned Swiss architect Bernard Tschumi.
Athens has celebrated the opening of the new Acropolis museum, the culmination of many years’ work by the internationally renowned Swiss architect Bernard Tschumi.
Swiss culture minister Pascal Couchepin, who announced his forthcoming resignation last week, joined a large group of dignitaries on Saturday for the historical occasion.
Couchepin was among 400 invited guests, including European Union Commission president, José Manuel Barroso, and the Director General of Unesco, Koichiro Matsuura.
Couchepin told swissinfo.ch that he was glad one of his last foreign trips brought him to the cradle of civilization. He said he was honoured to attend the opening of the museum with a Swiss connection.
The visit is also an opportunity to raise awareness of the Swiss presence on the international stage and to exchange views with other ministers.
Heads of state and government from at least 20 European and Mediterranean countries were invited to the opening of the €130 million (SFr196 million) centre.
Greece is proud of its new museum, even though the planning and execution of the project lasted 11 years and the opening was postponed several times.
The Greek culture minister Antonis Samaras has described the Swiss-French architect’s museum as a gem. According to Samaras, the ceremony is an event of world importance.
The new three-storey museum at the foot of the Acropolis with its famous Parthenon Temple boasts 25,000 square metres of floor space. The mainly glass and steel building offers more than ten times the exhibition space of the old museum on the Acropolis.
Minimalistic approach
Tschumi decided on a minimalistic and contemporary design, he told the Swiss news agency. “The exhibited sculptures had to be the centre point. I could not allow them to be in competition with the building.”
The sculptures reflect the light while the concrete structure absorbs it. “That makes the sculptures clearly visible and very beautiful,” Tschumi added.
In the building, the architect had to overcome different technical challenges, for example the exposure to summer heat and the risk of earthquake.
Small black points have been embedded in the glass to reduce the strength of the sunlight and a system previously used in Japan and California has been incorporated to limit the risk of earthquake damage.
The official opening of the museum was originally scheduled for 2004, to coincide with the Olympic Games that took place in Greece that year. But the occasion was postponed several times for different reasons.
During excavations, walls from houses dating back to antiquity were discovered. Later there were problems with local residents as well as long-drawn out legal proceedings and finally more delays were caused by the complicated transport of the delicate exhibits from the old museum to the new.
A dual French-Swiss national with offices in New York and Paris, Tschumi won the museum contract in an international competition which included designs by prominent names such as the United States star architect Daniel Liebeskind.
Parthenon FriezeTschumi’s idea to create a direct view connection between the hall where the Parthenon Frieze is displayed and the Parthenon on the Acropolis hill itself was a deciding factor in the jury’s decision.
The Parthenon Frieze is the crowning glory of the museum. However a large part of the frieze has still not been returned. They were removed in 1806 by Lord Elgin, then British ambassador to the Ottoman empire. To this day 56 of the 96 slabs of the Frieze are still in the British Museum in London.
The British have always argued that there was no suitable storage space for the works in Athens. This is no longer the case, the Greeks believe. And Tschumi assumes that the slabs will be returned to Athens some day.
Until then the missing pieces will appear as blurred holograms or copies in white marble to remind people of the missing originals.
Indeed the high profile of the opening ceremony may exert pressure on Britain to give back the antique Parthenon Frieze at last.
Gaby Ochsenbein, swissinfo.ch (Translated from German by Clare O’Dea)
- Keeping the Elgin Marbles in London is now untenable : June 17, 2009
- Opening plans for the New Acropolis Museum : February 14, 2009
- Delays to the opening of the New Acropolis museum : September 18, 2008
- New Acropolis Museum opening date : February 13, 2009
- A home fit for the Parthenon Marbles : December 5, 2008
- A new museum for the Acropolis : February 9, 2010
- June opening planned for the New Acropolis Museum : April 26, 2009
- June opening date set for the New Acropolis Museum : February 14, 2009