Tàpies Foundation
Tàpies Foundation
Tàpies foundation
Fundació Antoni Tàpies
The museum, initiated by the artist Antoni Tàpies himself, opened in 1990. He and his wife Teresa bequeathed many works to the museum. In addition, regular exhibitions on other artists take place here. The foundation is part of the Articket.
My Rating:
The positives:
A museum dedicated entirely to the artist Antoni Tàpies. Get to know this Catalan artist in the permanent exhibition!
The negatives:
You should be generally interested in contemporary art. Unfortunately, there is no audio guide for temporary exhibitions, but the annotations on the wall are available in English.
Last Modified: 23.01.2024 | Céline
Tàpies Foundation
Tickets
The details
at a glance
What is there
to see?
The museum dedicated to the artist Antoni Tàpies was opened in 1990. He and his wife donated many works to the museum – among them paintings, sculptures, books, engravings, and sketches, adding one work every year.
This gives you the chance to experience the different phases and techniques Tàpies went through. You will see sketches from the 40s, paintings from the 50s and 60s, and objects and sculptures from the 90s, too – they are on a rotating exhibition schedule.
About
Antoni Tàpies
Antoni Tàpies was born in Barcelona in 1923, and died here, too, in 2012. He took up drawing after an accident, which had sent him into a bit of a mental crisis. He ended up quitting the study of law, which he had taken up previously, and lived in a sanatorium from 1942 to 1943 – due to pneumonia. It was here that he began to imitate the works of van Gogh and Picasso.
Starting in 1946, he dedicated himself to painting and turned to surrealism. In 1950, he received a scholarship and moved to Paris, where he met Jean Dubuffet and the “Art Brut”. He, too, began to reduce his art to the bare essentials, and expanded his artistic style by incorporating everyday materials into his artwork. In the following years, he participated in a variety of exhibitions, met artists such as Picasso, and became politically active, too – he used four red stripes, the likeness of the Catalan flag, in his work, which got him thrown into jail for a brief time during the Franco dictatorship.
Tàpies never considered himself a great artist – not even an abstract artist – but more of a realist, trying to grasp reality. Throughout his life, his quest led him to create roughly 8,000 works.
Tàpies Foundation
A bit of History
The current Tàpies foundation building was created by the architect Lluis Domenech i Montaner from 1880 to 1882, a combination of iron and brick. Montaner, a contemporary of Gaudí’s, represented rationalism, while Gaudí had more of a naturalist style.
In 1984, in an effort started by Tàpies himself, the Fundació Antoni Tàpies was founded and later opened in Montaner’s building in Barcelona.
The building being a bit shorter than the neighboring houses, Antoni Tàpies himself crowned it with a sculpture called “Núvol i cadira” (Cloud and Chair, 1990). The building was declared an historic heritage site in 1997, but was renovated anyway from 2008 to 2010. In this context, the work known as “Mitjó” (Training sock, 1991) was installed on the Fundació’s terrace – you should definitely give it a visit.
Official website of the Fundació Tàpies (EN): fundaciotapies.org
Text and image rights: © Céline Mülich, 2013 – 2024