By: Aéssandra Rizzo, Associated Press Writer
ROME (AP).- A huge museum for contemporary arts and
architecture opens in Rome this weekend in a bid to draw avant-garde art
lovers to a city defined by its ancient monuments and Baroque
fountains.
The MAXXI museum designed by Iraqi-born architect Zaha Hadid is the
latest and most ambitious project to try to refresh the Italian
capital's image of a decadent city bent on its glorious past.
"My work just really stems from the fact that we can make new
juxtapositions with the old," Hadid told The Associated Press during
Thursday's preview opening. "The idea of connecting between the old and
new is very critical."
The museum marks its opening with a three-day extravaganza that
included the unveiling Thursday of inaugural exhibits; a party Friday
night for 5,000 artists, fashionistas, aristocrats and other VIPs; and
an admission-free day for a fortunate few thousand ticket holders.
On Sunday, MAXXI will open to the public.
The euro150 million ($223 million) MAXXI is made of white curving
cement walls, intricate black stairways that connect halls and pathways,
and floor-to-ceiling windows that give the museum natural light and
visitors a look out onto the neighborhood.
From the outside, the museum looks like a wide structure that
expands horizontally rather than vertically. Built on the grounds of a
former military barracks — of which a facade is still recognizable —
MAXXI is located in a residential neighborhood outside the city's
historic center.
Officials unveiling the opening exhibit Thursday stressed the link
between old and new, their belief that a city and nation that have been
on the avant-garde of art and architecture for centuries should be
promoting contemporary arts.
For Hadid, who became the first woman to win the prestigious
Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2004, the challenge was to work with the
"layers" of Rome's artistic past and bring a new space for art in the
city. She recalled visiting Rome in the 1960s and posing in front of the
Trevi Fountain, a masterpiece of Baroque art.
"Rome has fantastic light," Hadid said. "The idea of this project is
about layering and bringing in light to the space so that you have a
naturally lit space — and to give the curators tremendous freedom in the
way they can organize exhibits."
Rome is visited by some 12 million people each year, mostly
attracted to the artistic glories of its past — the ancient ruins, the
Colosseum, the fountains designed by Bernini or Michelangelo's Sistine
Chapel.
In recent years, officials have tried to expand Rome's culture
offerings with some cutting-edge works, but these efforts have met mixed
responses. Romans have been hostile to some new buildings, apparently
not convinced that a modern structure can successfully stand beside the
marvels of the past.
For example, the structure by Richard Meier that houses the
2,000-year-old altar Ara Pacis has drawn widespread criticism, including
from the current city mayor. Renzo Piano's Auditorium, which opened in
2002, has been more widely appreciated, giving Rome its first
major-league concert hall and becoming a hip spot and the venue of the
new movie festival in the Italian capital.
The Culture Ministry awarded the project for the MAXXI to Hadid
after an international competition in 1998.
The inaugural shows' highlight is "Space," an exhibit that takes
visitors along a route of art works by Anish Kapoor, Sol Lewitt and
others, combined with installations by architecture studios. Mixing art
and architecture, the show represents MAXXI's dual soul.
Among others, works on display are Andy Warhol's "Fate Presto," in
which he reproduces the front-page of an Italian newspaper in the wake
of an earthquake; Italian Francesco Vezzoli's "Democrazy," a video
installation featuring two hypothetical candidates for the U.S.
presidency played by Sharon Stone and Bernard-Henry Levy; William
Kentridge's "North Pole Map" tapestry in which dark figures are set
against an ancient geographic map.
Other inaugural shows feature a retrospective on Gino De Dominicis,
an eclectic and controversial Italian artist whose 24-meter (80-feet)
plaster skeleton lies just outside the main entrance; a reflection on
the relations between East and West through eight video works by young
Turkish artist Kutlug Ataman; and photographs, models and drawings by
Italian architect Luigi Moretti, whose projects included the Watergate
complex.
MAXXI, officially called the National Museum of the XXI Century
Arts, also houses an auditorium, libraries, workshops and spaces for
live events and commercial activities.
The museum had a limited weekend opening in November.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.