WEBINAR ENDED
Does historical art look incongruous in modernist buildings? Many of the 20th century’s leading architects certainly didn’t think so – and nor do the museum visitors who prize such eminent buildings and collections as the Museu Calouste Gulbenkian (Lisbon), the Kimbell Art Museum (Fort Worth), São Paulo Museum of Art and the Museo di Castelvecchio (Verona).

As the Frick Collection prepares for its temporary move into the Breuer building on Madison Avenue in New York – originally designed by Marcel Breuer to house the Whitney Museum of American Art – this discussion will place the Frick’s venture in the context of other modernist spaces in which historical collections have been displayed, many of them designed for the purpose. What aesthetic and interpretative possibilities are opened up by displaying pre 20th-century art in such buildings? What theoretical and practical demands do such projects make, in terms of materials, light or more broadly how modernist buildings envisage the relationship between people and interior space? What do we learn about historical works in these buildings? And does the architecture encourage us to see art differently?
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    Nausikaä El-Mecky
    Tenure track professor at Pompeu Fabra University (Department of Humanities), Barcelona
    Nausikaä El-Mecky specialises in attacks on art from iconoclasm to self-censorship in historical and contemporary settings. After obtaining her PhD in Art History from the University in Cambridge in 2013, she held postdoctoral fellowships at Humboldt University Berlin and Heidelberg University before starting her current position in Barcelona in 2018. She was elected as a member of the German Young Academy for its fifty outstanding young academics in 2017 and awarded the Maria Gräfin Award for original contributions to the humanities in the same year. She is the founder of Rebellious Teaching, an international platform for experimental, boundary-breaking education.
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    TEFAF