Tine Nehler - Pinakothek der Moderne
The architecture and history of libraries. The exhibition offers a review into history and an outlook to the developments of library buildings, thus envisioning their importance and position as well as reflecting any tendencies.
Ever since antiquity libraries have served as repositories of knowledge and cultural
memory and, as such, belong to the oldest of all building types. Already the
biblical verses of Salomo have quoted: "Wisdom builds her house" and this sentence
can be found in many bookhouses as a guiding motto. Since the Renaissance the most
important architects have dedicated themselves to this building task, thus giving
library buildings an exceptional position within the history of architecture.
In consequence of the changes of forms that information and communication underwent
due to digital media, the end of the printed book and the traditional library has
often been conjured up. However, in the past two decades more new buildings than
ever before have been constructed. Is this a last defiant struggle before libraries
vanish in globally accessible virtual data bases? Will libraries become a hybrid
mixture of book and data base, a general store of information? Will the conventional
collection of books find its specific place in the media society or merely serve as
a museum of historical forms of information and repositories? The exhibition of the
Architekturmuseum der TU München offers a review into history and an outlook to the
developments of library buildings, thus envisioning their importance and position as
well as reflecting any tendencies.
A collection of books only becomes a library by a system that enables a quick
reference and makes knowledge accessible. In the first part of the exhibition the
regulatory force and classification systems of knowledge will be described by means
of ca. 100 publications of the »Stiftung Bibliothek Werner Oechslin«. The rare and
valuable books and engravings offer a unique panorama of the historical attempts to
structure and architecturally solidify knowledge, followed by an exemplary survey on
the typology of library buildings. Models, plans and photographs convey excellent,
standard works and projects by Michelangelo, Étienne-Louis Boullée, Karl Friedrich
Schinkel, Gunnar Asplund, Alvar Aalto, Louis Kahn, Hans Scharoun, Dominique
Perrault, Max Dudler and many more. The third part of the exhibition shows the
attempts to collect the complete knowledge in a universal library and gives a
perspective to possible developments. Intermediate areas offer insights into the
manifold history of private, lost and fictional libraries, rounded off by a rapid
sequence of library scenes from 60 films.
The extensive accompanying publication by Prestel publishers comprises numerous
essays of renowned scholars as well as a contribution by Uwe Timm.
Opening: 13.07.2011, 19.00
Architekturmuseum der TU München
Arcisstraße 21, Munich
Opening Hours:
Tuesday through Sunday, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.