MAK Center for Art and Architecture
The MAK Center for Art and Architecture is an art museum and cultural center headquartered in the Schindler House in West Hollywood, California, United States.[1] It is affiliated with the Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna (MAK). The Center is situated in three architectural landmarks, designed by Austrian-American architect R.M. Schindler. The center operates a residency program, an exhibition space at the Mackey Apartments, and a study center at the Fitzpatrick-Leland House. HistoryThe MAK Center for Art and Architecture was founded in 1994 by Peter Noever, Director of the MAK / Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna.[2] On August 10, 1994, the Friends of the Schindler House formally entered into an agreement with the Austrian Museum of Applied Arts in Vienna to create the non-profit MAK Center for Art and Architecture. SitesThe MAK Center operates three works of architecture by Rudolph M. Schindler:
The Schindler House (1922) serves as the headquarters of the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, founded in 1994 as an independent satellite of the MAK-Austrian Museum of Applied Arts, Vienna, in cooperation with the Federal Chancellery of Austria/Art Division and the Friends of the Schindler House (FoSH). The Mackey Apartments (1939) provide residential facilities for the MAK Center’s residency programs. The building was purchased by the Austrian government in 1995 and made available for the activities of the MAK Center. Funded by the Austrian Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Labor, restoration works began in 1995 by the Central Office of Architecture, and continued with architects Space International in 2001 and 2004.
Exhibitions and programsMajor exhibitions in the Center’s history include
Additional past exhibitions include:
Residency programThe MAK Center operates the international MAK Artists and Architects-in-Residence Program at the Mackey Apartments. A six-month residency is offered twice annually to two artists and two architects per cycle. Residents live and work at the Mackey Apartments and present projects in exhibitions at the end of their term in March and September.[7] The program has been running since October 1995. The MAK Center has hosted 200 individual residents of Los Angeles’ arts, artists and architects from Austria, Argentina, Brazil, India, Mexico, Peru, Russia, South Africa, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and Turkey, amongst others. The Center initiated a twice-yearly exhibition series, Garage Exchange, in 2012, which invites alumni residents to collaborate with Los Angeles artists and architects of their choosing. LeadershipIn 2002, architect and curator Kimberli Meyer was named director. In 2016, Meyer announced her departure from MAK Center to helm the Cal State Long Beach Art Museum.[8] From 2016–2020, Priscilla Fraser, then Project Architect at LACMA, joined the MAK Center.[9] In 2021, Jia Yi Gu, former director at Materials & Applications, was appointed the museum's new director.[10] References
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