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Serralves Foundation announces the opening of the new Álvaro Siza Wing, the expansion of the Serralves Museum designed by Pritzker Prize-winning architect, Álvaro Siza. The 45,000-square-foot expansion will be inaugurated by two major exhibitions: Improbable Anagrams, an exhibition of that showcases the Serralves Foundation’s collection spanning over 60 years, curated by Philippe Vergne, Museum Director, and C.A.S.A., an acronym for “Coleção Álvaro Siza, Arquivo,” exhibiting works from the archives of Siza, curated by António Choupina. The exhibitions will be open to the public from February 24 to August 24.
Following 18 months of planning and construction, the Álvaro Siza Wing consists of three floors—one floor dedicated to the archives of Serralves, and two floors for exhibitions of contemporary art and architecture, adding almost 50% more exhibition space and 75% more reserve space to the already large Museum. As a result, the additional space will allow for new acquisitions, donations, and deposits of important collections and archives. The new building is connected to the original Museum via an elevated gallery and is also accessible from the first floor. Outdoors, the existing landscape has been preserved; the recently built Wing celebrates the expression of natural growth and global influence on Siza’s work.
The newly built Wing is located in Serralves Park, on the west side of the pre-existing building. The new building maintains a perfect relationship with the building complex and is constructed with reinforced concrete structural walls, plastered on the outside with cork insulation, and covered on the inside with double plasterboard. The exterior facades are plastered and painted with granite wainscoting around the entire building perimeter.
The inauguration of the Álvaro Siza Wing of the Museu Serralves represents an important milestone in the history of the Serralves Foundation, while also paying tribute to one of the greatest names in architecture. The expansion underlines the historic relationship between Serralves and Siza. Mindfully designed in concert with the landscape of Serralves Park, the Álvaro Siza Wing branches out from the original Museum in a gentle expression of Siza’s fidelity to organic form. Fully integrated into the landscape, the Wing houses the Serralves Collection, the Portuguese State Contemporary Art Collection, the BPP Collection, and the collections on deposit (FLAD, Leal Rios, Mário Teixeira da Silva, among others), which encompass nearly 5,000 works of art. The Serralves Collection also includes an important collection of artists’ books and editions, comprising around 5,000 books. The building is also home to a large part of the important Siza archive.
“When the Serralves Museum opened its doors in 1999, Portugal had, for the first time in its history, a museum with the aim of promoting contemporary art and culture in its most diverse forms of expression. 25 years later, the Serralves Museum is a national and international benchmark, which in 2023 was visited by one million, one hundred fifty thousand people. This museum deserved to overcome the limitations of space that constrained its capacity for artistic dissemination. And that’s what brought us here: this building represents a new milestone for Serralves, while paying a well-deserved tribute to Álvaro Siza - one of the greatest names in the history of world architecture. Here the Serralves Collection will be on permanent exhibition in a dynamic way, presenting different exhibitions over time and, and at the same time, we will have dedicated space committed to architecture exhibitions and programs,” shares the President of the Board of Directors of the Serralves Foundation, Ana Pinho.
Museu Serralves Director, Philippe Vergne, notes, “With a wing dedicated to the Permanent Collection and Architecture, the Serralves Museum is more than ever an institution where the present is fully activated and where the recent past is settled and decanted. It allows the institution to fully take responsibility for its history and legacy, as well as for its role as the leading institution in Portugal dedicated to the history and the present of contemporary art and culture.”