ABTEIBERG MUNICIPAL MUSEUM,MÖNCHENGLADBACH, GERMANY

Designed by Hans Hollein; completed 1982
Since the 1990s, it has not been uncommon for architects and their clients to break
with the two previously prevailing alternatives—temple or warehouse—for art museums,
but such a typological rupture had been dramatically anticipated two decades earlier, by
Hans Hollein in the Museum Abteiberg, a unique building tailored to an unusual site and
a distinctive collection. The Pritzker Prize laureate of 1985, who was born in Vienna in
1934 and is an artist, teacher, and creator of furniture, interiors, and exhibitions, has at
Mönchengladbach assembled a virtual primer of museum design, one that has brought a
heretofore unknown visceral excitement to the vocation of museum going. In contrast to
later attempts in this genre, however, Hollein’s achievement has contributed to an
intensified appreciation of the museum’s contents rather than making a personal
statement at their expense.
Although Hollein has learned from the institutional buildings of Louis I.Kahn and
Alvar Aalto, he listens to his own music, which—to pursue the metaphor—includes
concerti from the 18th, symphonies from the 19th, and popular songs from the 20th
centuries. His eclecticism served him well in this complex commission, made more
difficult by the need for the museum to serve urban as well as aesthetic ends. Hollein has
linked Mönchengladbach’s town center on the heights with the medieval Ettal Abbey
(today the city hall) on the slopes below, assembling a multi-tiered museum from a series
of discrete elements of different sizes and shapes that provide a series of delightfully
varied indoor and outdoor rooms. Distributing the individual volumes in space rather than
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containing them within a monolithic whole allowed him to maintain the picturesque scale
of the town; at the subterranean level, the disparate sections are united.
Although designing a museum is always challenging, it is perhaps less onerous when,
in contrast to those encyclopedic institutions that are in continual flux, its holdings
consist of a focused group of works. Kahn found such a golden opportunity in the
Kimbell Museum, and Hollein has exploited the similar possibilities here, where he
worked closely with the director, Jonathan Cladders, in formulating the program. They
believe that today the museum itself represents a Ges amtkunstwerk (total work of art), “a huge scenario
into which the individual work is fitted…not the autonomy of the work at any price but
the deliberately staged correspondence between space and work of art” (Klotz, 1985, p. 19). This especially applies to contemporary art, which frequently is
deliberately produced for a museum setting. The plan that Hollein and Cladders evolved
is without precedent for this building type. None of the customary tropes, whether
conventional or modern—vaulted galleries arranged symmetrically, the universal space,
the proverbial white cube—are present. Instead, the combination of small, contained
cabinets and larger rooms perfectly accommodates a collection that, although including
some historical pieces, is mainly focused on the post-World War II period and, although
international, is richly endowed with work by American artists of such competing
movements as Minimalism, Post-Painterly Abstraction, and Pop. Many works are in the
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form of installations without customary boundaries or frames and do not necessarily
require natural light.
From the town, one enters the museum precinct via an elevated walkway that leads to
a stone-faced platform whereon is set a tower containing administrative offices; a library;
workshops and storage; a cubic, top-lighted undivided volume for temporary displays; the
shedroofed, zinc-clad “clover-leaf” pavilion for the permanent collection; and the
entrance temple. The platform also covers museum spaces excavated into the hill, and
from it, one can descend gradually to curving terraces, furnished with sculpture, that
border the gardens of the former abbey; beneath a portion of the terraces are additional
exhibition areas.
Hollein has rejected the prescribed routes encountered in traditional museums for
mysterious, polymorphous paths that compel the viewer to wander on her own and
discover unexpected places, then to turn back on them or chance on new chambers.
Because chronology is not the issue it would be for a historically based collection, the ad
hoc character is stimulating rather than frustrating. Upstairs and downstairs, under- and
above-ground, the variously configured galleries illuminated by diverse means—daylight
through windows and skylights and artificial light via incandescent, neon, and fluorescent
fixtures—permit individual works to be perceived in the setting most sympathetic to their
makers’ intentions. The most organized part of the display areas comprises what Hollein
calls the “cloverleaf”—a group of seven “kissing squares,” to use Kahn’s formulation,
that are traversed at the corners. Set under saw-toothed skylights, these rooms are ideal
for big pieces by such artists as Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, Carl Andre, and Roy
Lichtenstein. There are also curved rooms, some with undulating walls that are positively
Baroque in character; double-height spaces and circular steps add further drama.
Hollein’s rejection of the convention of amorphous flexible areas, dominant since the
1940s, in favor of a rich variety of specific and distinctive spaces, would in the 1990s
become a popular solution for art museums—yet another example of the way the
Museum Abteiberg adumbrates many later schemes for this type of institution.
Also prescient is Hollein’s interjection of playfulness and irony into the reverence that
typically pervades museum design. Although marble clads some of the surfaces, it is
combined with less elevated masonry materials like brick and sandstone. Reflective as
well as transparent glass appears; zinc is placed beside chromium and steel. One side of
the temple-like pavilion that forms the main entrance sports graffiti in red paint, matching
the color of some of the railings. Exterior light fixtures have an industrial character in
contrast to the lush surrounding landscape and the textured brick walls and paths. The
visitor, constantly encountering the unpredictable, is sensitized to the daring originality of
the art displayed.
It is instructive to compare Museum Abteiberg with another German museum from the
same period that similarly had a profound effect on subsequent museum design—James
Stirling’s Neue Staatsgalerie (1977–84) at Stuttgart. Both are set on irregular terrain and
require urbanistic interventions, but Stirling’s solution revives and updates the 19thcentury
museum paradigm, whereas Hollein has jettisoned all previous solutions. Both
make reference to industrial as well as classical buildings and use the technique of
compositional collage, yet their differences illuminate the manifold possibilities inherent
in the museum program.

ABSTRACTION

The 20th century is indelibly marked by the new vision realized by modern art. This
vision is no doubt a response to the success of material science, but it is also a cultural
phenomenon, an invention that helps us adjust to the new and often daunting horizons
that science and technology have opened up. Architecture has benefited as much from
that new artistic vision as it has from directly adopting new technology, and the invention
of abstract art is one of the important strands of this development.
Abstract art is a product of modern times. It can be seen to follow from the loss of
conviction sustained by the ancient view of art as imitation, or mimesis, that is,
representing the visible world and placing humanity into a visible narrative. To say that
photography supplanted representational art would be to oversimplify the story, but it
certainly played a part, and throughout the 19th century one can trace the steps by which
another standard gradually took the place of the time-honored one. In British Romantic
painter J.M.W.Turner’s tumultuous landscapes and in the Impressionist Claude Monet’s
freely composed water lilies, we see a progression in which more and more weight is
given to the artist’s feelings in front of the motif, or the subject. It is through personal
selection that the artist abstracts the aspects that he or she desires to emphasize and out of
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them constructs the composition, no longer bound by verisimilitude. Abstract art thus has
two principle components: abstraction and expression.
It was perhaps the fin-de-siècle French painter Paul Cézanne who brought the
movement to its point of precipitation since it was largely he who substituted the actual
vertical plane of the canvas for the virtual horizontal plane of Renaissance perspective.
His painting of a curve in the road creates a feeling about the road disappearing from
view, not through perspective but by the multiple relations invented in a flat composition
(Turn in the Road, 1882, Boston Museum of Fine Arts, Massachusetts). Equally, it was Vincent van
Gogh who painted with swirling pigment what he felt rather than what he saw. By 1907
the promptings of popular science were suggesting that physical reality must be quite
different from appearance, the search was on for the “fourth dimension,” and the time
was ripe for the invention of Cubism. Analytical Cubism allowed the artist to give a
metaphysically complex visual account of the subject, and Synthetic Cubism introduced
fragmented material from the world (newsprint, textiles, paper, string) into the picture
plane, or the artist’s composition. During World War I, abstraction progressed toward the
sublime purism of Piet Mondrian’s gridded, neoplasticist compositions and the ineffable
weightless rectangles of Kasimir Malevich, who opened a perspective with Russian
Suprematism that reaches through to the end of the century in the language of abstract
planes used by architects such as Peter Eisenman, Richard Meier, Rem Koolhaas, and
Zaha Hadid.
Architecture in the 20th century made its first steps in the shadow of the Arts and
Crafts tradition, with Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Josef Hoffmann, and Michel de Klerk,
among others. Architecture was as much in need of liberation as the plastic arts, but it
was at the same time in need of a new authority to replace ancient authority, something
more compelling than the intuition of the artist. One answer was found in the authority of
science. For architects, the innovative language of abstraction was not so much a gateway
to freer personal expression as an escape from the conventions of traditional construction.
It was no longer necessary to affix the Antique orders to facades or to follow academic
rules of ordonnance and symmetry in drawing plans. Abstract forms opposed no
difficulties of a formal kind to the idea of a plan freely following the program and so
freed architecture to create its own myth, that of functionalism. To the subjective
intuition of the artist, functionalism opposed a firm objective law similar to the laws of
nature.
There was a short time, hardly more than a year, when architecture came close to
sharing with art a complete autonomy of form. The year was 1923–24, when De Stijl
leader Theo van Doesburg collaborated with the architect Cornelius van Eesteren in
designs for villas. In projects such as Space-Time Construction No. 3 of 1923, his use of axomometric projection
obscures for a moment the difference between an art composition created on the flat
plane of the canvas for contemplation and the threedimensional equivalent constructed in
real life for use. When van Doesburg designed the interior for the dance hall L’Aubette in
Strasbourg, using dramatic rectangles set diagonally on the walls and ceiling, he could
not compensate for the ordinariness of banal adjuncts, such as balcony rails and fixed
seating, which seem to remove the viewer completely from the world of contemplation
proper to fine art. An even more poignant case is that of the Schröder House in Utrecht,
where Gerrit Rietveld’s exterior, like his famous chair, can certainly be contemplated as a
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kind of artwork, while the interior is mediated by the dynamic use of movable screens for
privacy, reducing the object of contemplation to a practical convenience.
The paradox was fed by the polemical ideology of such protagonists of the Modern
movement in architecture as J.J.P.Oud and Le Corbusier, who led the way in identifying
architecture with engineering, thereby conceptualizing it as a subject that develops
through research and discovery, in which the interest will always be in the novel and not
in the already known. According to the credo of International Style, decisions in
architectural design should result from rational analysis of the functions, replacing the
traditional practice of starting from precedent, which was suffused by convention and
custom.
For some, the architect could not claim to shape his building from his inner
perceptions; it had to be shaped from something more socially relevant. Functionality
provided a rule apart from the purely subjective, and it was a rule that had little precedent
in the visual arts. The impact of abstraction within architecture was to create a new duty
toward the social function of the building and toward the physical material of
construction. Empirical needs would guide form, and form would be free to follow
function in the ecstatic exercise of liberation. Within architecture, then, abstraction and
functionalism appeared to share a common destiny.
In fine art, Mondrian remained the most extreme purist, and there is no question that
he identified avoidance of figuration as an expression of spirituality. In the heroic 1920s
and 1930s, artists such as Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse preferred to distort
appearances rather than abandon them. In the case of Fernand Leger, his Communist
sympathies kept him firmly focused on the essence of the worker, and between Le Mécanicien (1918)
and Abs tract Compos ition (1919), there is only a difference of degree; the figure remains. This enables us to
say something clear about abstraction, namely, that it is not exclusive. It is clearly
possible to employ abstraction in due measure without abandoning figuration.
The nascence of abstract art seemed to suggest a solution for architecture by
redefining nature itself as a kind of artist. This was the argument advanced in an
influential book by D’Arcy Thompson, On Growth and F orm (1917). Thompson conceived of nature as the
supreme designer, producing functional structures that were also intrinsically beautiful.
Not only do the skeletons of dinosaurs follow engineering principles, but the patterns of
growth in hard-shell mollusks observe strict mathematical rules, as the strictly
logarithmic series preserves a constant proportion. Nature thus seems to be the
penultimate designer, and the products of nature are “naturally” beautiful. As art
approached nature in following natural law, it could appropriate nature’s beauty. In the
book Circle, edited by Leslie Martin, Ben Nicholson, and Naum Gabo (1937), it is clear that
abstract form had taken on an aura of objectivity at odds with the reality of its subjective
origins.
It is not until De Stijl in the Netherlands and the Abstract Expressionists of the New
York School in the 1950s that one finds another impulse to abandon figuration, above all
with the mural-scale abstract canvases of Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, and Mark
Rothko. In postwar painting the expressive gesture generated the source of meaning, and
the authenticity of that gesture became the guarantee of artistic truth. However, this
immediacy was difficult to achieve within architecture, with its reliance on physical
reality. The urge toward purity that the viewer found in Mondrian and later in Rothko is
marked with renunciation, and renunciation is truly difficult to reconcile with
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functionalism. In art, all arguments are ad hominem, and what one person can do is
always exceptional. The idea that abstract art approached a deeper level of reality than
figurative art proved difficult to sustain as a general principle, and to this extent it seemed
that the hopes of objective validity pinned on bringing abstraction into architecture have
proved illusory.
During the crystallization of Modernism in the 1930s, it was simply not possible to
eliminate appearances; as long as buildings had to have openings such as doors and
windows, as long as they could be entered and used, they clearly served as utilities. Use
created meaning, at the most basic level, because doors not only permit entry but also
denote entry. The struggle for purity turned into a struggle to eliminate ornament, and this
was accentuated by the belief that only through standardization could the building’s
economy be fully realized. To match transparency in art, we have austerity in
architecture, epitomized by the German architect Mies van der Rohe. Standardization was
considered the key to realizing the full benefits of mass production. With standardization
went repetition, and the monotony of the curtain wall in identical glass panels reduced the
possibility of expressive form. It was enough that buildings were massive and impressive,
tailored to the demands of modern business, and expression was demonstrated in seeing
which city had the tallest building.
From the pluralism of Postmodernism, it became evident that standardization was not
as effective in economic terms as marketing. The appearance of a steel-frame building
could be changed at will in order to present a spectacular image; the facade became a
surface of signification, and irony, humor, and eclectic style were manipulated in such a
transformation. Strict economy of construction held less expressive importance. With the
end of the 20th century, it became possible to see that the authenticity attributed to
abstract forms was balanced by the freedom they conferred upon expression. This was
manifest in the 1960s and 1970s within fine art but not within architecture. Today, in the
work of Frank Gehry, Peter Eisenman, Daniel Libeskind, and Zaha Hadid, there is no
longer any concealment of the expressive gesture.
Except in extreme cases, such as aircraft design, forms are primarily derived not from
a scientific analysis of the functional requirements but from the creative feelings of the
designer. The architect can have feelings about the function as well as everything else,
but he or she is now permitted to sublimate these into a more general concept of the
purpose and meaning of a building. So, for example, Libeskind’s Holocaust Museum in
Berlin is conceived from a universal set of emotions including suffering and persecution,
and the jagged forms of the windows are an expression of this emotive tenor and not a
response to the practical uses of daylight. In the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in
Bilbao, Spain, Gehry’s abstract, dynamic forms derive from the capacity of the computer
to control the fabrication of complex components and allow him to generate an
architectural composition as powerful as anything displayed inside the functional
building that it also is. In this way, the architect has acquired the technical means that will
allow him or her to “build” gesture with all the immediacy of the painter. Abstraction
emerges as an acknowledged means of expression.

Arts and Crafts Movement; Le Corbusier, Le (Jeanneret, Charles-Édouard) (France);
Cubism; Curtain Wall System; de Klerk, Michel (Netherlands); De Stijl; Eisenman, Peter
(United States); Gehry, Frank (United States); Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, Spain;
Encyclopedia of 20th-century architecture 12
Guggenheim Museum, New York; Hoffmann, Josef (Austria); International Style;
Koolhaas, Rem (Netherlands); Mackintosh, Charles Rennie (Scotland); Meier, Richard
(United States); Oud, J.J.P. (Netherlands); Postmodernism; Rietveld, Gerrit
(Netherlands); van Doesburg, Theo (Netherlands).