Sabancı University Sakıp Sabancı Museum
Transcription
Sabancı University Sakıp Sabancı Museum
Market Sabancı University Sakıp Sabancı Museum (SSM), one of the first private museums in Turkey, is an original complex nourished by surrounding social and cultural geography that continually represents the different historical layers on which it is located. In this sense, SSM functions as an intercultural bridge of art that takes Turkey to the world and the world to Turkey, all the while constituting a living space and cultural center. SSM projects a multifaceted approach to museum management with its collections, international exhibitions, conservation units, educational programs, concerts, international congresses and seminars. As a university museum, the museum sets a modern, pioneering and innovative standard in Turkey with its academic structure, emphasis on science, and its incomparable location in İstanbul. Achievements Since its foundation with the mission of encouraging the study, understanding and dissemination of the world’s historical, artistic and cultural heritage throughout Turkey, SSM has achieved numerous firsts in the representation of art and culture. Major historical exhibitions SSM has introduced to Turkey include “The Art of the Book from East to West and Memories of the Ottoman World Masterpieces from the Lisbon Calouste Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon” which presented manuscripts and printed books, textiles, weavings and Iznik tiles; “Istanbul, Isfahan, Delhi: Three Capitals of Islamic Art Masterpieces from the Louvre Collection,” which presented treasures from the Louvre’s Islamic Art section, and “Genghis Khan and His Heirs, The Great Mongol Empire,” which featured artifacts surviving from the largest empire in recorded history. Furthermore, SSM has held major retrospective exhibitions of works by great masters of modern art, including “Picasso in Istanbul” (2005), “Salvador Dali: A Surrealist in Istanbul” (2008) and “Joan Miro. Women, Birds, Stars” (2014). SSM presented some of the most important and original reflections of modern art with the “Joseph Beuys and his Students – the Deutsche Bank SUPERBRANDS Collection” exhibition, which presented a wide selection of the artistic approaches the famous artist Joseph Beuys influenced as a teacher (2009), “Sophie Calle – For the Last and First Time” (2011) and “Anish Kapoor in Istanbul” (2013). In addition to various exhibitions held in its own venue, SSM also promotes its permanent collections internationally by lending works to exhibitions abroad. Selected pieces from its Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection and Painting Collection were exhibited as Sakıp Sabancı’s private collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Los Angeles County Art Museum, Harvard University Arthur M. Sackler Museum, the Louvre, Berlin Guggenheim Museum and Museum für Angewandte Kunst in Frankfurt between the years of 1998 and 2001, prior to the founding of the museum. S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum has also become known with exhibitions consisting entirely of its own collections in notable international museums. Some of these foreign exhibitions include “Evocations, Passages, Atmospheres and Paintings from the Sakip Sabanci Museum, Istanbul,” at the Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon, followed by “Lines in Gold: Ottoman Calligraphy from Sakıp Sabancı Museum, Istanbul,” at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, Madrid (2007), and “Five Hundred Years of Islamic Calligraphy,” at the National Museum of Bahrain (2014). In addition to international art projects, S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum was awarded the Turkish Presidency Culture and Arts Grand Prize in 2009 as an Institution of Culture and the Arts. History S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum is located in Emirgan, one of Istanbul’s most storied sections of the Bosphorus. The villa that comprises the Museum’s main building was commissioned in 1927 by Prince Mehmed Ali Hasan of the Egyptian Khedive family to Italian architect Edouard de Nari, who designed numerous other important structures during his life in Istanbul. The mansion was used for many years as a summer residence by various members of the Khedive family before it was bought from Princess İffet by Hacı Ömer Sabancı in 1951. The house then became known as “The Mansion with the Horse”, in reference to the statue placed in front, created in 1864 by French sculptor Louis Doumas. A second horse statue on The Mansion with the Horse grounds is a cast reproduction of one of four horses that was taken from the Hippodrome of Constantinople during the heavy looting of the 4th Crusade in 1204, and placed in front of the San Marco Church in Venice. Following the death of Hacı Ömer Sabancı, The Mansion with the Horse became the private residence of the Sakıp Sabancı Family, housing Sakıp Sabancı’s rich calligraphy and painting collections. In 1998, the mansion was bequeathed to Sabancı University, along with its collections and furniture. A modern gallery wing was added to the original structure and the Museum was opened to the public in 2002, with the exhibition space being expanded in 2005 and upgraded to meet international technical standards. Product In 2009, SSM carried out a groundbreaking project in the city of Mardin, a cradle of civilizations in southeast Turkey, which was sponsored by the Sabancı Foundation. The project oversaw the restoration of the historic building formerly used as military barracks and its transformation into the Sakıp Sabancı Mardin City Museum, displaying artifacts that document and exhibit the city’s formation and way of life, along with its invaluable customs, languages and cultures. As such, Sakıp Sabancı Mardin City Museum and the Dilek Sabancı Art Gallery opened to visit on October 1, 2009 with the aim of reflecting Mardin with its cultural richness and depth.Thus far, the museum has held numerous exhibitions including “Selected Works from the S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum Collection: Nature, Mankind and the Sea,” “Abidin Dino in Mardin” and “Lo and Behold. Ara Güler in Mardin” Children’s workshops and education programs are held throughout the year with the sponsorship of Sabancı Foundation, reaching children in Mardin and its surrounding districts and villages. SSM Children’s Education Programs, which began to be held regularly parallel to the “Picasso in Istanbul” exhibition, continue with added diversity and content with workshops and children’s books in conjunction with the exhibitions held at the museum, focusing on art, artists, art movements, history and culture. These specially prepared children’s books have also been made into audio books and are now available for streaming and download, free of charge, from the museum’s website as of 2014. Furthermore, SSM continues its spring and autumn Adult Education Programs on subjects such as art history, modern art, architecture, mythology and cinema, along with various symposia, panel discussions and conferences in conjunction with exhibitions. In 2013, with the collaboration of Sabancı University Science Center, SSM launched its “DigitalSSM” project. DigitalSSM presents the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection, the Turkish Painting Collection, Abidin Dino Archive and Emirgan Archive together with over 77,000 high-resolution visuals on the www.digitalssm.org website. The year 2013 also oversaw a thorough botanical research on the expansive gardens of SSM with the help of the Istanbul University Department of Forestry, which recorded tree and plant species, labeling them with information available to botany enthusiasts. The research identified 115 different plant varieties including rarely seen plants, with conferences on nature and botany being held within the scope of the “SSM Garden” project. Recent Developments S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum and Google Cultural Institute collaborated for the development of the museum’s inclusion in Google Art Project, which was launched in 2015. Using digital technology to offer art enthusiasts the experience of walking through the museum and viewing the SSM collections along with the furniture collection of The Mansion with the Horse, the project effectively keeps the museum open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Another project in 2014 was “The Portrait of Sakıp Sabancı”, a video installation commissioned to artist Kutluğ Ataman by the Sakıp Sabancı family in 2011, to mark the 10th anniversary of Sabancı’s passing. The artwork uses the latest technology in visual arts comprises of the photographs of thousands of people who have been supported by, have given support to, and have been in touch with Sakıp Sabancı, putting forth Sakıp Sabancı’s vision as a timeless concept. In 2015, “The Portrait of Sakıp Sabancı” was invited to be exhibited at the main section of one of the world’s oldest and most influential art organizations, the 56th Venice Biennale. Promotion S.U. Sakıp Sabancı Museum is home to two permanent collections, namely The Art of the Book and Calligraphy Collection and the Turkish Painting Collection from the Ottoman Reformation to the Republic. Presenting a comprehensive look at 500 years of Ottoman calligraphic art, the SSM Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection consists of rare hand-written Korans, as well as murakkas, verses, inscriptions, hilyes, royal decrees, charters and menşurs, exhibited along with the tools calligraphers employed. Continuing its tradition of collecting, the Sakıp Sabancı Museum continually adds new works to the Art of the Book and Calligraphy Collection, and displays these works in the Ottoman Calligraphy Halls located in the Mansion. In 2012, the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection was re-launched with a new design and a contemporary display approach. This new permanent presentation of the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection allows visitors to view animations linked to iPad applications with “augmented reality” technology and also take a detailed look at valuable and rare manuscripts, page by page. The Painting Collection at the Sakıp Sabancı Museum is much more than a personal collection amassed by Sakıp Sabancı with an interest in a particular period of Turkish painting; it is a cultural repertoire comprising momentous clues as to the birth and development of the art of painting in the region, including works produced between 1850 and 1950. In this way, the collection is a continuation of the historical process delineated by Sakıp Sabancı Museum Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection, showcasing the transformation of visual image production as well as the concepts of art and artist, reflecting the modernization period from the Ottoman Empire to the Turkish Republic. The history of Turkish painting is presented in tandem with selected iconic art works from the collection along with the furniture and decorative objects in family rooms. The rooms on the ground floor of the “The Mansion with the Horse” display furniture influenced by baroque, rococo, neogothic, neo-classic and empire styles and 19th century decorations used by the Sabancı Family when the mansion served as their residence. The Archeological and Stone Works Collection consists of Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman pieces and is exhibited in the Museum’s garden. A paper conservation laboratory has been in place and functioning since the opening of the Sakıp Sabancı Museum. The laboratory, which was first established to oversee the conservation and restoration of all manuscripts which constitute a large part of the Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection, has been developed further to include a painting conservation section. Conservation specialists oversee children’s education workshops and workshop activities in addition to their work in conservation. In past years, Sakıp Sabancı Museum has hosted such events as the IIC congress titled “Conservation and the Eastern Mediterranean”, “Fakes, Misattributions and Puzzles: Investigating paintings by scientific methods” by Dr. Ashok Roy the Director of Collections at the National Gallery, and “The Conservation of Modern and Contemporary Art: Issues, Challenges, and Current Research” presented by Dr. Tom Learner, Head of Science at The Getty Conservation Institute. Having hosted a great number of exhibitions since its opening in 2002, SSM positions its temporary exhibitions to reflect the nature and comprehensiveness of its Arts of the Book and Calligraphy and Turkish Painting Collection. Every Wednesday, the Museum is open until 8:00, with admission being free of charge to all visitors. In addition, admission is always free for children up to the age of 14 along with one adult, handicapped visitors and one companion, and people above the age of 60. The museum is closed on Mondays. www.sakipsabancimuzesi.org THINGS YOU DIDN’T KNOW ABOUT Sabancı University Sakıp Sabancı Museum › The horse statue that greets museum visitors at the SSM garden is a cast reproduction of one of the four bronze horses that were taken from Hippodrome in Sultanahmet during the 4th crusade between 1202 and 1204. ›The Museé d’Orsay in Paris is home to a larger version of the statue of David and Goliath by Antonin Mercié on display in the family rooms of The Mansion with the Horse. ›The endowment deed bearing the seal of Sultan Mehmed I from the SSM Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection is of special importance as a sealed document surviving from the early days of Ottoman history. Dating to two years before the ascent of Sultan Mehmed I, also known as Çelebi Mehmed, to the throne, the endowment deed is one of the very few such documents that has survived to the present day. ›The SSM Arts of the Book and Calligraphy Collection also includes a notable contemporary interpretation of traditional calligraphy, a video titled “Water” from the “Mesapotamian Dramaturgies” series by artist and director Kutluğ Ataman. Added to the collection in 2012 on the Museum’s 10th anniversary, the work is designed based on photographs taken at different hours of the Bosphorus and the waterway that divides Istanbul into its European and Asian sides. ›Halil Paşa’s painting titled “Madam X,” yet another invaluable piece of the SSM Painting Collection, was displayed in 1889 at the Paris Fair and was awarded the Bronze Medal. Today, the painting is exhibited at the SSM galleries along with its award certificate. ›SSM Painting Collection also includes Osman Hamdi Bey’s only known still life painting, “Flowers in a White Vase.” dating to 1876, it depicts peonies in a Chinese vase with a peacock motif. SUPERBRANDS