The Making of the Gulbenkian Museum
- Addresses public curiosity about Gulbenkian and his approach to collecting
- Based on previously unpublished archival documents and images
- Places the Gulbenkian Museum within the broader context of post-war museology, showcasing the contributions of renowned specialists such as Franco Albini and Georges-Henri Rivière
- Highlights the pioneering role of women curators
Focusing on Calouste Gulbenkian’s determination to preserve his cherished art collection intact after his death, this book tells the story of the creation of the Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon. It begins with the efforts of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, founded in 1956, to reunite an exceptional art collection then dispersed between Paris, Washington D.C. and London. The book examines the legal, diplomatic and practical measures that made this mission possible and follows the planning of a museum shaped by the most advanced museological thinking of the 1950s and 1960s, whereby the artworks themselves guided decisions across architecture, exhibition design and museography. It also highlights the key roles played by the first generation of Portuguese women curators and international consultants, from cataloguing the works to trial exhibitions and final installation. Ultimately, the volume shows how the Foundation interpreted and translated Gulbenkian’s taste and character into museum form, resulting in a unique and enduring institution.
- Publisher
- Kulturalis
- ISBN
- 9781836360551
- Publish date
- 14th Sep 2026
- Binding
- Paperback / softback
- Territory
- World
- Size
- 220 mm x 170 mm
- Pages
- 128 Pages
- Illustrations
- 100 color
Distributed by ACC Art Books
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