Close Menu
celebritymediamanagement.com
    What's Hot

    Jack Whitehall’s humiliating wedding moment saying ‘my whole a*** was hanging out’

    April 21, 2026

    Best 5 Luxury Cruise Options for Expedition Travel and Remote Destinations in 2026 (Sponsored content from Felix Morales)

    April 21, 2026

    Marcel Duchamp and the urinal that broke the art world at MoMA

    April 21, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Jack Whitehall’s humiliating wedding moment saying ‘my whole a*** was hanging out’
    • Best 5 Luxury Cruise Options for Expedition Travel and Remote Destinations in 2026 (Sponsored content from Felix Morales)
    • Marcel Duchamp and the urinal that broke the art world at MoMA
    • Ted Danson says Bill Clinton grilled him about his ‘intentions’ with Mary Steenburgen using Secret Service
    • 8 Secret Hacks to Score Huge Discounts on Luxury Hotels in 2026
    • Cabin Contemporary opens 2026 season with ‘Unusual Usuals’
    • The richest celebrity couples, ranked
    • Are Affair Rumors True? – Hollywood Life
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    celebritymediamanagement.com
    Tuesday, April 21
    • Home
    • Celebrity Events
    • Scandals & Confessions
    • Trending Celebrity News
    • Beauty Gone Wrong
    • Celebrity Marriages & Divorce
    • Luxury Celebrity Homes
    • More
      • Celebrity Cars & Collections
      • Priceless Art Collections
      • Hollywood Movie Rumors
      • Vacation Hotspots For The Rich
    celebritymediamanagement.com
    Home»Art Collections»Comment | The dissolution of Antwerp’s museum of contemporary art should serve as a warning to all – The Art Newspaper
    Art Collections

    Comment | The dissolution of Antwerp’s museum of contemporary art should serve as a warning to all – The Art Newspaper

    CelebrityMediaManagementBy CelebrityMediaManagementJanuary 7, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    Comment | The dissolution of Antwerp’s museum of contemporary art should serve as a warning to all – The Art Newspaper
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    In October 2013, Kerry James Marshall opened an exhibition at M HKA, the museum of contemporary art in Antwerp, Belgium. The show, which was the artist’s most substantial presentation in Europe to date, went remarkably unnoticed in the Benelux region. Twelve years later, the same artist was heralded by the leading conservative art critic in the Netherlands as the “best painter alive” for his show at the Royal Academy of Arts in London (until 18 January 2026).

    Artists including Emilia Kabakov are asking for the return of their works

    That M HKA doesn’t get a mention in this review is revealing. Until now, the museum has played a role in the middle ground, a “development laboratory”, in the words of Bart de Baere, its outgoing director. That position seems to have become untenable as, in October, the Flemish ministry of culture instructed the museum to be closed, and its collection transferred to the S.M.A.K. in Ghent. The ministry also cancelled a €130m planned new building for M HKA that was ready to break ground.

    What will be lost if M HKA disappears? Its programme is not one of spectacle nor hype that politicians and the media like to embrace. Rather, it serves a crucial role in linking emerging and established forms of art. Its collections are modest, often archival, embracing ideas such as Eurasian internationalism whose time is yet to come. It has organised seminal exhibitions on artists including Jimmie Durham and on local (but non-Flemish) practitioners such as Otobong Nkanga, Laure Prouvost, Dora García and Nástio Mosquito. It is a founding member of the L’internationale, a European confederation of museums, arts organisations and universities that has tried to shape a contemporary trans-European cultural vision.

    Now a passionate rearguard action has been launched by artists and cultural workers in Flanders under the banner “Museum at Risk”. Its members occupied the museum’s entrance for 24 hours and have pushed Antwerp city councillors to stand up against the Flemish government and the Socialist Party, which were behind the move. Meanwhile, international artists including Emilia Kabakov and the estate of Christian Boltanski are asking for the return of their works or their deletion from the museum’s collection website—pieces they believed belonged to Antwerp and its citizens. These are heartening steps that show a community and city in need of a museum. Yet the danger is that, if successful, things will only return to the status quo ante—a situation that few were content with in the first place.

    Ten years ago, de Baere and his colleagues embarked on a mission to build a new building to address the shortcomings of the museum’s current space. The building is far from ideal, its storage depot is totally inadequate, its collection management in need of better resources. In general, M HKA has always had the air of a temporary home looking for a permanent solution. Now, all the protesters are able to demand is the preservation of this inadequate state of affairs and de Baere himself has stepped back from such a scenario.

    Looking back over the past three weeks of action and reaction, it appears the political decision largely revolved around the new M HKA building. By “liberating” the construction budget, Caroline Gennez, the culture minister, may have got her hands on enough money to satisfy various small-scale demands and to support her pet projects. The political commitment to a big gesture and a new museum seems to be simply beyond her civic-political imagination. Unless that decision is reversed, M HKA is unlikely to thrive.

    This is where Flemish particularities meet broader western European forces. M HKA’s position can only be defended if the financial enablers of the cultural sector view their support as part of a wider ecosystem of care and sustenance. In this way, art is not instantly translatable into social or economic benchmarks. At the political level, this means elected ministers and civil servants need a vision of supporting culture without demanding instant accountability. It also means allowing cultural institutions and collections to find their resonance over time. These principles were present in western Europe from around 1960 until today. Now, they are dissolving into populist, neoliberal and politically clueless fragments. The case of the disappearing museum is therefore unlikely to be confined to Antwerp.

    • Charles Esche is a curator, writer and professor of contemporary art and curating at Central Saint Martins in London. He is the former director of the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Netherlands

    Antwerps Art Comment Contemporary dissolution museum Newspaper serve warning
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    CelebrityMediaManagement
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Marcel Duchamp and the urinal that broke the art world at MoMA

    April 21, 2026

    Cabin Contemporary opens 2026 season with ‘Unusual Usuals’

    April 21, 2026

    New WAM exhibition explores the stories behind museum collections – The Minnesota Daily

    April 20, 2026

    Texas’ First Modern Art Museum Is In A Gorgeous San Antonio Colonial Mansion

    April 20, 2026

    Is the best Minimalist art collection in world sitting in…

    April 19, 2026

    A Timeline of Postwar American Art

    April 19, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Jack Whitehall’s humiliating wedding moment saying ‘my whole a*** was hanging out’

    April 21, 2026

    Jack Whitehall and Roxy Horner tied the knot over the weekend, and not everything at…

    Best 5 Luxury Cruise Options for Expedition Travel and Remote Destinations in 2026 (Sponsored content from Felix Morales)

    April 21, 2026

    Marcel Duchamp and the urinal that broke the art world at MoMA

    April 21, 2026

    Ted Danson says Bill Clinton grilled him about his ‘intentions’ with Mary Steenburgen using Secret Service

    April 21, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Latest Reviews
    About Us

    Welcome to Celebrity Media Management — your ultimate backstage pass to the glamorous, scandalous, and jaw-dropping world of celebrity culture.

    From red carpet events and exclusive Hollywood parties to the juiciest confessions and outrageous plastic surgery rumors, we cover it all — raw, real, and unapologetically entertaining. Our team of pop culture enthusiasts, insiders, and trend-watchers work around the clock to bring you the most talked-about celebrity stories from around the globe.

    Our Picks

    Jack Whitehall’s humiliating wedding moment saying ‘my whole a*** was hanging out’

    April 21, 2026

    Best 5 Luxury Cruise Options for Expedition Travel and Remote Destinations in 2026 (Sponsored content from Felix Morales)

    April 21, 2026

    Marcel Duchamp and the urinal that broke the art world at MoMA

    April 21, 2026
    OUR CATEGOIRES
    • Celebrity Events
    • Scandals & Confessions
    • Trending Celebrity News
    • Beauty Gone Wrong
    • Celebrity Marriages & Divorce
    • Celebrity Cars & Collections
    • Luxury Celebrity Homes
    • Priceless Art Collections
    • Hollywood Movie Rumors
    • Vacation Hotspots For The Rich
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • About Us
    Copyright © 2025. CelebrityMediaManagement.All Right Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.