Sunday, May 10, 2026

Financial Independence Is a Museum’s Greatest Asset

 https://observer.com/2026/05/museum-news-director-interview-de-pont-contemporary-art-maria-schnyder/?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=arts&utm_term=05/09/2026





De Pont Director Maria Schnyder On Why Financial Independence Is a Museum’s Greatest Asset

"Rita McBride once described De Pont Museum as 'an artist's dream'—and that is exactly what we strive for. It does not always make the museum the easiest place for visitors, but it does make it a unique space to experience an artist's practice in its undiluted form."

A woman wearing black stands with her hands in her pockets in an empty exhibition space
Housed in a former woolen mill in Tilburg, the De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art offers 7,000 square metres of exhibition space that ranges from intimate 12-cabinet galleries to a vast central hall where wool-spinning machines once stood. Photo by Roos Pierson

In April, the De Pont Museum in the Netherlands announced that Maria Schnyder would serve as its new director. The De Pont is a celebrated Dutch museum showing contemporary art, located in a former woolen mill in Tilburg. The museum’s collection is built around living artists, with the emphasis on the quality of the work over any other criteria. Schnyder joined De Pont in 2013 and spent the last four years as deputy director, which means she’s taking over an institution whose daily rhythms she already knows intimately. Observer recently caught up with her to discuss her new role and the unique challenges of governing an institution with such a strong artist-first ethos.

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Your predecessor, Martijn van Nieuwenhuyzen, arrived with decades of outside experience at the Stedelijk and the ICA—a more typical external-hire trajectory. What advantages do you see in rising from within rather than coming from outside?

I worked very closely with Martijn, and I have been deeply invested in and fully supportive of the direction in which the museum has been evolving. I can ensure continuity as a matter of course—which is essential in the case of De Pont Museum and its long-term relationships with artists—while also having a clear and critical understanding of where its untapped potential lies and how, with a small but decisive organization, we can take it to the next level.

De Pont Museum has 7,000 square meters of exhibition space, yet the entire organization amounts to only 18 full-time employees. This demands synchronization and alignment: it must operate as a well-oiled machine in order to consistently realize exhibitions of international scale and ambition.

In announcing your appointment, board chair Taco Dibbits framed De Pont’s artist-first commitment as especially urgent “in an era in which societal and audience-driven agendas are increasingly setting the tone in the museum sector.” That reads as a bit of a shot at what some of your peers are doing right now. Do you share his concerns in this regard?

I don’t think it was intended as a critique, but rather as a reflection on the exceptional position of De Pont Museum. The foundation is financially independent, allowing the museum to put artists first without being bound by other agendas. Rita McBride once described De Pont Museum as “an artist’s dream”—and that is exactly what we strive for. It does not always make the museum the easiest place for visitors, but it does make it a unique space to experience an artist’s practice in its undiluted form.

Rather than opposing other approaches in the field, it is about recognizing that De Pont Museum represents a model that is no longer self-evident, and exactly because of that, remains highly necessary in today’s cultural and political climate. It is a model I am committed to carrying forward.

The former Thomas de Beer wool mill that houses the De Pont Museum has an almost mythic status in the museum-architecture conversation—by some accounts, it helped shape the thinking behind Tate Modern. Dibbits specifically cited your “emphatic kinship” with the space in his statement. For a curator, what does the building make easy, and where does it complicate matters?

The building has a unique patina, and its spaces are very different from more conventional gallery rooms. They range from 12 small cabinets—each with two doors, originally designed to ventilate stored wool—to a vast central hall of 35 by 35 meters, where the massive wool-spinning machines once stood.

It has an open floor plan with long sightlines, meaning everything is interconnected. There is no possibility of creating closed circuits; temporary exhibitions and collection displays inevitably intertwine in the visitor’s experience. I am used to thinking in rhythmic sequences across different spaces rather than in distinct chapters. For each exhibition, we select the galleries that resonate with the works we want to show, meaning that exhibition routes are never the same.

Over the years, I have learned the various ways in which the building is generous to the art, and when it can be somewhat more capricious. Above all, I have learned to embrace it as an ally. Once you have internalized its cadence, it becomes an exceptional playground, challenging artists in the best possible way to reconsider what truly matters in the presentation of their work and inviting them to discover uncharted territory.

Your academic background is a hybrid—French literature and linguistics alongside art history at Fribourg, then the research master at Groningen. Linguists and curators don’t always work with the same tools. Has the literary-linguistic side of your training actually made its way into your curatorial practice?

For sure, though more as a kind of underlying baseline than as something that translates into explicit discourse. Linguistics has made me understand how language both reflects the world and structures how we experience it, and how different languages and cultures carve up experience in distinct ways.

From literature, I learned the value of staying with difficulty. It has instilled in me an existential sense of reward in remaining with works that do not immediately yield themselves, but demand effort and sustained attention. That sensibility has very much carried over into my curatorial practice.

Where do you see De Pont’s position within the regional landscape, and within the wider Dutch museum landscape, where the biggest names and budgets sit in the Randstad? Or is it your goal to program for the wider art world?

De Pont Museum is a destination museum—a place for those willing to make the effort to encounter contemporary art on the artist’s own terms, within an exceptional architectural setting. With regard to the regional landscape, I think we need to move beyond a binary Randstad-versus-province logic and foster a more genuinely international mindset. Tilburg is as close to Brussels and Düsseldorf as it is to Amsterdam. That geographical reality should be reflected in how we think and operate as an institution.

Hendrik Driessen set a collection philosophy of depth over breadth—follow a small number of artists over many years, acquire key works within a body of work, skip the comprehensive-coverage approach. What are the advantages of this tactic? What are your favorite pieces in the collection?

The collection has no predetermined focus on artistic lineage, social discourse, geographic origin or thematic orientation. It is about bringing contemporary voices together that resonate with, reframe and challenge one another. Personally, I tend to think of it as a gathering around a long table. When I think about further developing the collection, I imagine conversations between artists that are already thriving, those that call for a new impulse and those that have yet to emerge. And from time to time, this evolving constellation calls for a voice that resists its existing order, instead disrupting and unsettling it. In any case, inviting a new artist to join the collection signals a long-term commitment to their practice.

The collection philosophy of depth over breadth is a direct consequence of De Pont’s artist-first approach. By following an artist’s work over time and building a meaningful body, the museum is able to convey their position with both conviction and nuance. In collection displays, this results in a more concentrated viewing experience.

The focus on depth has, over the years, resulted in many exceptional ensembles that set our collection apart. I think of Thomas Schütte, for instance, a personal favorite, with Grosser Respekt as an absolute masterpiece. But also more recently acquired groups of works by, for example, Ragnar Kjartansson and Laure Prouvost are without any doubt of international significance.

De Pont remains a privately funded foundation built on Jan de Pont’s estate, without structural government subsidy. With public budgets under pressure across Europe, that independence looks increasingly like an asset. What kind of advantages does such a structure offer your institution? Is America doing it right by providing our museums with basically no public funding?

I think it is very tricky to compare the European and the American situations, but essentially, I believe that public art institutions should be part of a country’s core infrastructure. In the case of De Pont Museum, it was from the very beginning a matter of collegiality for the foundation not to apply for public funding. The idea was that if, as a private foundation, you add something to the existing institutional landscape, you should not then draw from the available public funds, but be able to sustain your own position.

Today, that financial independence allows us to remain fully committed to an artist-first mission and to carry that forward into the future. At the same time, it requires a very clear sense of direction and sharp focus. As mentioned, the organization is lean, and the museum concentrates on solo exhibitions developed in close collaboration with artists. There is no capacity to facilitate academic research or publishing programs. Our acquisitions budget is fixed, and each choice carries consequence: to select one work is to forgo another. So while De Pont enjoys full autonomy, it is within a clearly defined financial framework that demands discipline and a strong sense of focus.

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Friday, May 8, 2026

another caviar leftie

 

https://www.domusweb.it/en/art/gallery/2026/05/05/venice-biennale-2026-anish-kapoor-palazzo-manfrin-venice.html


Something similar happened with Vantablack. In 2016, Kapoor acquired the exclusive rights to the artistic use of a military-derived nanotechnology that absorbs 99.96 percent of light, making any surface visually flat, depthless, almost nonexistent. The move provoked a response from the British artist Stuart Semple, who in turn created and put on sale the brightest pink ever produced, with the explicit condition that it could be purchased by anyone except Anish Kapoor.





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Anish Kapoor has reopened his palazzo in Venice — and it's more than just an exhibition

By
domusweb.it
May 05, 2026
Anish Kapoor has reopened his palazzo in Venice — and it's more than just an exhibition

For the 2026 Venice Biennale, Palazzo Manfrin reopens to the public with an exhibition bringing together Anish Kapoor’s architectural models, mirrored sculptures, Vantablack works, and immersive installations that transform space into a perceptual experience.

View gallery

All the exhibitions to see in Venice during the 2026 Biennale

When Anish Kapoor bought Palazzo Manfrin in Venice, he found more than a home for his studio, foundation, and future museum. He solved a problem that has always accompanied his work: where to place works that often resist coexistence with anything else.

Kapoor’s sculptures demand, almost by definition, space, emptiness, distance.

And it is not simply a matter of scale. Even when they avoid monumentality, they continue to operate through absorption, reflection, and deformation of the surrounding space: a concave surface alters the reflection of an entire room; deep black erases the edges and curves of the object to which it is applied; reflective steel overturns the viewer’s body and draws it into the work.

It is therefore easy to see how, placed beside other works, this perceptual precision can lose force — or take it away from what surrounds it.

View of Manfrin Palace. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

Palazzo Manfrin appears, then, first of all as a practical response to a concrete problem: a historic Venetian building transformed into a place where the work can dictate its own terms.

Not a white cube, not a collection to be neatly traversed, but a palace still rough, irregular, partly bare — where sculpture can once again become architecture, and architecture becomes a material to be pushed to its limits.

The exhibition staged on the occasion of the 2026 Art Biennale seems to begin from this conviction: around one hundred architectural models from the past fifty years — some of which became actual works, many of which remained hypotheses — are displayed alongside large-scale installations and works in stainless steel, pigment, cement, silicone, paint, and Vantablack.

The first surprise is that the exhibition does not seem designed to impress — or at least not in the most predictable way.

The works and optical effects that made Kapoor famous are there, but generous space is given to the architectural models: small, often fragile, made from raw materials and populated by tiny human figures that measure their scale.

Not a white cube, not a collection to be neatly traversed, but a palace still rough, irregular, partly bare — where sculpture can once again become architecture, and architecture becomes a material to be pushed to its limits.

Some of these projects have entered the world: Ark Nova , the first inflatable concert hall; the Sant’Angelo metro station in Naples, due to open in 2025. Others remain suspended. It is not always clear whether they are still waiting for someone brave enough to build them, whether they are technical fantasies, or simply provocations.

View of Manfrin Palace. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

The cavity, the cut, the crater, the fissure — and then the crack, which in some models becomes an almost violent urban gesture: a line that incises space without asking permission, opening Paris towards the Eiffel Tower.

What they share is an urban intrusiveness: they treat the city fabric as matter to be forced, as a threshold to be crossed and contradicted. As though this were the necessary cost of producing epiphany in the viewer.

Kapoor works within a tradition in which form precedes its structural justification: one begins with a plastic gesture and then asks technique to follow.

The result is never a building-object so much as an object that behaves like a building. And not without consequences.

Maquette by Anish Kapoor, Cloudgate, Chicago, 2006. View of Palazzo Manfrin. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

Cloud Gate , the large bean-shaped mirror installed in Chicago in 2006, whose maquette is on display at Palazzo Manfrin, has had a rather turbulent public life. In 2018, Kapoor won a lawsuit against the NRA for the unauthorized use of its image in a propaganda video. In November 2025, Border Patrol agents photographed themselves in front of the sculpture after a series of raids in the Latino neighborhood of Little Village: Kapoor compared them to the Nazi SS and is considering another lawsuit. Meanwhile, groups have appeared on Reddit convinced that the sculpture’s reflective surface was being used by the Secret Service to monitor visitors to the park, or that someone is locked inside it.

The Bean — conceived as the collective mirror of a metropolis — has become, despite itself, a political battlefield. And it is only the most emblematic case.

Something similar happened with Vantablack. In 2016, Kapoor acquired the exclusive rights to the artistic use of a military-derived nanotechnology that absorbs 99.96 percent of light, making any surface visually flat, depthless, almost nonexistent. The move provoked a response from the British artist Stuart Semple, who in turn created and put on sale the brightest pink ever produced, with the explicit condition that it could be purchased by anyone except Anish Kapoor.

Palazzo Manfrin was acquired in 2018 and has opened to the public only twice in eight years — always during the Biennale.

Here, the works can remain without having to fight the world. At least until they decide to go outside.




Domus Digital Archive PRO on sale

Anish Kapoor has reopened his palazzo in Venice — and it’s more than just an exhibition

For the 2026 Venice Biennale, Palazzo Manfrin reopens to the public with an exhibition bringing together Anish Kapoor’s architectural models, mirrored sculptures, Vantablack works, and immersive installations that transform space into a perceptual experience.

When Anish Kapoor bought Palazzo Manfrin in Venice, he found more than a home for his studio, foundation, and future museum. He solved a problem that has always accompanied his work: where to place works that often resist coexistence with anything else.

Kapoor’s sculptures demand, almost by definition, space, emptiness, distance.

And it is not simply a matter of scale. Even when they avoid monumentality, they continue to operate through absorption, reflection, and deformation of the surrounding space: a concave surface alters the reflection of an entire room; deep black erases the edges and curves of the object to which it is applied; reflective steel overturns the viewer’s body and draws it into the work.

It is therefore easy to see how, placed beside other works, this perceptual precision can lose force — or take it away from what surrounds it.

View of Manfrin Palace. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

Palazzo Manfrin appears, then, first of all as a practical response to a concrete problem: a historic Venetian building transformed into a place where the work can dictate its own terms.

Not a white cube, not a collection to be neatly traversed, but a palace still rough, irregular, partly bare — where sculpture can once again become architecture, and architecture becomes a material to be pushed to its limits.

The exhibition staged on the occasion of the 2026 Art Biennale seems to begin from this conviction: around one hundred architectural models from the past fifty years — some of which became actual works, many of which remained hypotheses — are displayed alongside large-scale installations and works in stainless steel, pigment, cement, silicone, paint, and Vantablack.

The first surprise is that the exhibition does not seem designed to impress — or at least not in the most predictable way.

The works and optical effects that made Kapoor famous are there, but generous space is given to the architectural models: small, often fragile, made from raw materials and populated by tiny human figures that measure their scale.

 Not a white cube, not a collection to be neatly traversed, but a palace still rough, irregular, partly bare — where sculpture can once again become architecture, and architecture becomes a material to be pushed to its limits. 

Some of these projects have entered the world: Ark Nova, the first inflatable concert hall; the Sant’Angelo metro station in Naples, due to open in 2025. Others remain suspended. It is not always clear whether they are still waiting for someone brave enough to build them, whether they are technical fantasies, or simply provocations.

View of Manfrin Palace. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

The cavity, the cut, the crater, the fissure — and then the crack, which in some models becomes an almost violent urban gesture: a line that incises space without asking permission, opening Paris towards the Eiffel Tower.

What they share is an urban intrusiveness: they treat the city fabric as matter to be forced, as a threshold to be crossed and contradicted. As though this were the necessary cost of producing epiphany in the viewer.

Kapoor works within a tradition in which form precedes its structural justification: one begins with a plastic gesture and then asks technique to follow.

The result is never a building-object so much as an object that behaves like a building. And not without consequences.

Maquette by Anish Kapoor, Cloudgate, Chicago, 2006. View of Palazzo Manfrin. Photo: Giorgia Aprosio

Cloud Gate, the large bean-shaped mirror installed in Chicago in 2006, whose maquette is on display at Palazzo Manfrin, has had a rather turbulent public life. In 2018, Kapoor won a lawsuit against the NRA for the unauthorized use of its image in a propaganda video. In November 2025, Border Patrol agents photographed themselves in front of the sculpture after a series of raids in the Latino neighborhood of Little Village: Kapoor compared them to the Nazi SS and is considering another lawsuit. Meanwhile, groups have appeared on Reddit convinced that the sculpture’s reflective surface was being used by the Secret Service to monitor visitors to the park, or that someone is locked inside it.

The Bean — conceived as the collective mirror of a metropolis — has become, despite itself, a political battlefield. And it is only the most emblematic case.

Something similar happened with Vantablack. In 2016, Kapoor acquired the exclusive rights to the artistic use of a military-derived nanotechnology that absorbs 99.96 percent of light, making any surface visually flat, depthless, almost nonexistent. The move provoked a response from the British artist Stuart Semple, who in turn created and put on sale the brightest pink ever produced, with the explicit condition that it could be purchased by anyone except Anish Kapoor.

Palazzo Manfrin was acquired in 2018 and has opened to the public only twice in eight years — always during the Biennale.

Here, the works can remain without having to fight the world. At least until they decide to go outside.

Show:
 
Anish Kapoor at Manfrin Palace 
Dates:
 
May 6-August 8, 2026 
Where:
 
Manfrin Palace, Cannareggio, Venice



https://www.domusweb.it/en/art/gallery/2026/05/05/venice-biennale-2026-anish-kapoor-palazzo-manfrin-venice.html