Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum reopens after three-year renovation

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Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum reopens after three-year renovation
Atmosphere at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum's ribbon cutting opening ceremony at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum on December 12, 2014 in New York City. Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images/AFP.



NEW YORK, NY.- Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, the only museum in the United States devoted exclusively to historic and contemporary design, opened the renovated and restored Carnegie Mansion, Friday, Dec. 12. The transformed museum now offers 60 percent more exhibition space to showcase one of the most diverse and comprehensive collections of design works in existence.

Ten inaugural exhibitions and installations, many of which draw from the museum’s permanent collection of more than 210,000 objects that span 30 centuries, feature more than 700 objects throughout four floors of the mansion. For the first time in the museum’s history, the entire second floor has been dedicated to showcasing the permanent collection through a variety of exhibitions.

Visitors also are able to experience a full range of new interactive capabilities thanks to Bloomberg Connects, Bloomberg Philanthropies’ digital engagement program, including the opportunity to explore the collection digitally on ultra-high-definition touch-screen tables, draw their own designs in the Immersion Room, and solve real-world design problems in the Process Lab. A newly developed Pen, which further enhances the visitor experience through the ability to “collect” and “save” information, will launch in early 2015.

The transformation of the historic Carnegie Mansion (the former residence of Andrew Carnegie) into a 21st-century museum is an astonishing work of design in itself, with an esteemed team of 13 design firms involved. The spirit and character of the landmark building were preserved, with key elements restored to their original grandeur. Much-needed system upgrades were made, allowing for more flexibility to reduce exhibition installation time, better accommodate the movement of objects and, above all, to enhance public access on every level.

“The opening of Cooper Hewitt is a seminal moment for the Smithsonian in New York City,” said Wayne Clough, Secretary of the Smithsonian. “The inaugural exhibitions showcase the astonishing breadth of Cooper Hewitt’s collection. I am excited about this new chapter of the museum’s history as it continues to serve the public through innovative education and outreach programs.”

“With the unveiling of the newly transformed Cooper Hewitt, the public will access four floors of exhibition galleries—including the first full-floor installation devoted to works from our collection—in spaces completely reimagined for 21st-century audiences,” said Caroline Baumann, Director of Cooper Hewitt. “The new Cooper Hewitt is a must-see and must-do destination to experience historical and contemporary design in a way like never before. The museum’s dynamic exhibition program, enhanced by interactive experiences that draw the visitor into the design process, will shape how people think about the power of design and ultimately, its capability to solve real world problems.”

Inaugural Exhibitions
Cooper Hewitt opened with a rich mix of exhibitions, taking full advantage of its enhanced, expanded and more flexible gallery space. This includes a fivefold increase in square footage dedicated to the permanent collection, which has enlarged from one gallery to an entire floor.

Floor by floor, the 10 inaugural exhibitions and installations at Cooper Hewitt prompt and answer key questions at the heart of design. •On the third floor, debuting in the versatile new 6,000-square-foot Barbara and Morton Mandel Design Gallery, “Tools: Extending Our Reach” (on view Dec. 12 through May 25, 2015) explores how tools extend the human body, senses, capacity and action—with results that change the world, and also change ourselves.

• The second floor features four exhibitions highlighting aspects of Cooper Hewitt’s renowned collection, including “Making Design” (on view Dec. 12 through 2015), which brings together more than 350 objects for the museum’s first long-term presentation of works from its collection; “Hewitt Sisters Collect” (on view Dec. 12 through 2015), the first exhibition to share the story of Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt, who in 1897 established a museum within Cooper Union modeled on the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris and the V&A in London, which later became the basis of Cooper Hewitt’s collection; “Passion for the Exotic: Lockwood de Forest, Frederic Church” (on view Dec. 12 through September 2015), which evokes the fascination of late 19th-century America with the arts of India; and an inaugural installation of 18th and 19th century staircase models in the Models & Prototypes gallery (on view Dec. 12 through 2015), which provides insights into the important role of architectural models and design prototypes.

• The new Immersion Room, also on the second floor, features more than 200 examples of Cooper Hewitt’s extraordinary collection of wallcoverings, one of the largest in North America, and allows visitors to select their favorite s or draw their own designs, and then project full-scale versions onto the gallery walls.

• “Beautiful Users” (on view Dec. 12 through April 26, 2015) premieres in the new Design Process Galleries on the first floor and demonstrates the shift toward user-centric design based on observations of human anatomy and behavior.

• A hands-on Process Lab allows visitors to immerse themselves in design practice through physical and digital activities to emphasize how design is a way of thinking, planning and problem solving, and provides a foundation for the rest of the design concepts on view in the museum.

• Also on the first floor, the guest-curated “Maira Kalman Selects” (on view Dec. 12 through June 14, 2015) is an assemblage of objects from Cooper Hewitt, other Smithsonian collections and the artist’s own home that suggests a life story, from birth through death.

• On the ground floor, “Designing the New Cooper Hewitt” reveals the process behind three years of renovation and transformation at the museum from the perspective of the design firms involved in the project, plus Irma Boom who designed the museum’s first collection handbook since 1997.

“Tools” and “Beautiful Users” will be accompanied by fully illustrated catalogs. Other reopening publications include Making Design: Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum Collection, designed by Boom; Life of a Mansion: The Story of Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum; and two books by Kalman, Ah-ha to Zig-Zag: 31 Objects from Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum and My Favorite Things.










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