18.05.2018
Object Stories
A Look at the Collection
Object Stories offers a new look at the richness of Belgium’s largest design collection. The presentation features some 200 objects from 1805 until today. It combines both highlights and favourites chosen from a historical and personal perspective by various museum staff members. The collection pieces do not serve a theme or a chronological macro-history. Instead, the objects themselves attract the attention, as individual narrators of stories and meaning.
Six layers of meaning
Because they are everyday objects, design objects often escape our attention. Here, in the context of a museum, they invite you to take a close look at them. An object incorporates several meanings. At the start of Object Stories you can choose one or six layers of meaning as your guiding principle. Each route looks at ten objects from a certain perspective. Alternating layers of meaning enable the visitor to experience and read the presentation and the collection pieces in different ways.
Commissions & Commissioners
Who commissions objects and why do they do so?
Without their commissioners, most of the objects in Commissions & Commissioners would never have existed. Commissions take a range of forms in the design world. Private individuals can order furniture for a specific house while companies can retain designers on the basis of a market strategy.
Making Matters
How is an object made?
The making process and the search for new materials and production models are often just as important for designers as the result. Some objects in Making Matters illustrate key technical moments in design history, others are the result of expertise in a technique and the perfecting of that technique until it becomes a trademark.
Curiosity
What curious stories do objects tell?
The pieces in Curiosity cause astonishment and act as conversation pieces. Some objects tickle our curiosity as a result of their remarkable appearance or of their unusual function. Other pieces are outsiders in the collection or came into existence in a quite peculiar manner.
Responsible Objects
When is an object socially or ecologically responsible?
Responsible Objects shows objects that emerged as ‘do-gooders’ out of the social engagement of their designers. There are examples throughout history of quality furniture made for the middle and working classes, DIY design and ecological design strategies such as recycling and local production methods.
Bauhaus 100!
Traces of a legendary design school
In 2019 we celebrated the hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Bauhaus, the influential German bustling avant-garde school of design. Artists, architects and craftspeople contributed to an all-encompassing abstract design language through which, in the aftermath of the terrible First World War, they wanted to reshape society. We searched the Belgian section of our collection for any traces of Bauhaus ideas.
Children’s Choices
How do children look at design objects?
Seven children explored the museum collection and chose an object that spoke to them in particular. Listen to their stories and look at the objects in Object Stories through another perspective! Taking the booklet I spy, I spy with my little eye as your guide, you can discover ten objects in the exhibition with children in a playful manner.
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