Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo

The year 2014 marked the centenary of the birth of Roman-born Brazilian architect Lina Bo Bardi. Among the best known of Lina’s many contributions to Brazilian modernism is Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP). Begun in 1957 and opened in 1968, MASP flouted European museological and museographical conv...

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Main Authors: Stephen Mark Caffey, Gabriela Campagnol
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2015-03-01
Series:Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/90
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spelling doaj-f797abc2dd7f4f6f9844826cbd2660a32020-11-24T21:06:48ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Conservation and Museum Studies2049-45721364-04292015-03-0113110.5334/jcms.102122172Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São PauloStephen Mark Caffey0Gabriela Campagnol1Texas A&M UniversityTexas A&M UniversityThe year 2014 marked the centenary of the birth of Roman-born Brazilian architect Lina Bo Bardi. Among the best known of Lina’s many contributions to Brazilian modernism is Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP). Begun in 1957 and opened in 1968, MASP flouted European museological and museographical conventions, dissolving structural, temporal and hierarchical boundaries. Lina’s expressive architectonic forms and revolutionary exhibition scheme allowed the works in the MASP collection to literally stand on their own as objects liberated completely from chronological, connoisseurial and scholarly classification systems. Lina designed MASP to provoke ‘reactions of curiosity and investigation’ by redefining notions of space and form within and beyond the context of the museum as mausoleum, archive and treasury. This collaborative analysis examines the philosophical, theoretical, practical and formal elements of what John Cage purportedly characterized as ‘the architecture of freedom’. Toward that end, this article situates MASP and its collections within broader historical discourses of museum practice to reveal the transgressive genius of Lina’s architectural and museal gestures. We conclude with a discussion of current debates surrounding the conventionalization of MASP’s exhibition protocols, considered in the contexts of conservation and proposed changes to the structure and its immediate urban setting.http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/90Brazilmuseum architecturemuseologymuseography
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen Mark Caffey
Gabriela Campagnol
spellingShingle Stephen Mark Caffey
Gabriela Campagnol
Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
Brazil
museum architecture
museology
museography
author_facet Stephen Mark Caffey
Gabriela Campagnol
author_sort Stephen Mark Caffey
title Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
title_short Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
title_full Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
title_fullStr Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
title_full_unstemmed Dis/Solution: Lina Bo Bardi’s Museu de Arte de São Paulo
title_sort dis/solution: lina bo bardi’s museu de arte de são paulo
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Conservation and Museum Studies
issn 2049-4572
1364-0429
publishDate 2015-03-01
description The year 2014 marked the centenary of the birth of Roman-born Brazilian architect Lina Bo Bardi. Among the best known of Lina’s many contributions to Brazilian modernism is Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP). Begun in 1957 and opened in 1968, MASP flouted European museological and museographical conventions, dissolving structural, temporal and hierarchical boundaries. Lina’s expressive architectonic forms and revolutionary exhibition scheme allowed the works in the MASP collection to literally stand on their own as objects liberated completely from chronological, connoisseurial and scholarly classification systems. Lina designed MASP to provoke ‘reactions of curiosity and investigation’ by redefining notions of space and form within and beyond the context of the museum as mausoleum, archive and treasury. This collaborative analysis examines the philosophical, theoretical, practical and formal elements of what John Cage purportedly characterized as ‘the architecture of freedom’. Toward that end, this article situates MASP and its collections within broader historical discourses of museum practice to reveal the transgressive genius of Lina’s architectural and museal gestures. We conclude with a discussion of current debates surrounding the conventionalization of MASP’s exhibition protocols, considered in the contexts of conservation and proposed changes to the structure and its immediate urban setting.
topic Brazil
museum architecture
museology
museography
url http://www.jcms-journal.com/articles/90
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