ISTANBUL

De Nieuwe Kerk

Colourful stories

Almost 300 art treasures of the sultans (1400-1800) from the Topkapi Palace and other Istanbul Museums came together in the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam. As the concept for the exhibition, the client proposed the city of Istanbul. Our task was not to literally make a copy of the whole city. Even more important was to find a place for a Turkisch Muslim City in a Dutch protestant church. The solution lay in Istanbul itself, a city that has always been the connected point between east and west. The Hagia Sophia, originally built as a church and later turned into a mosque, is the example of the coming together of Christian and Muslim elements. The Nieuwe Kerk could certainly be consciously used as a setting.

Location
Amsterdam (NL)
Client
Stichting De Nieuwe Kerk
Year
2006
Detail

Turkish carpets

Laying down 700 square metres of Turkish carpets transformed the church into a mosque-like space. Printed cloth of various shapes and sizes showed typical Turkish buildings such as the bazaar, the coffee house, the mosque and the hammam. These grand gestures played with the monumental architecture of the church and determined the ‘first impression’

Three-part collage

Mosque with carpets
Opening with Queen Beatrix
Opening with Queen Beatrix
From above
Terrace with Turkish men

Wandering through the city

In the exhibition, the visitor moved through an abstract Istanbul, wandering through little streets and large open spaces, taking in views and vistas. Because the focus was on the essence of the city-the light, the sound, the typical architecture and the lush use of tile patterns- the whole church exuded the atmosphere of Istanbul.

Three-part collage

Bazar with couple
The soundtrack of the exhibition drew from contemporary recordings from various places in Istanbul. The bargaining of street vendors and the hum of merchants selling their wares in the bazaar were audible in space.
From above with lighting details
Lighting design also played an essential role. Not only the collection, but the church itself and the ‘city’ were illuminated so that the church became the backdrop for an eastern fairytale.

Awards

The Great Indoors Award 2007

  • Show & Sell, nominated

FX International Design Awards Londen 2008

  • Museum or Exhibition Space, finalist

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