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Omer koc art collection
Omer koc art collection











omer koc art collection

Impressions of Istanbul: Voyage to Constantinople. It was first published in The Book Collector, Summer 2021. The following review was written by Type & Forme’s Anke Timmermann. Impressions of Istanbul: Voyage to Constantinople Angus O’Neill, preface to The Ömer Koç Collection.

omer koc art collection

For most of the 20th century it must have seemed impossible that another library could be formed comparable to that of Gennadios now, however, one begins to wonder. The worst would be for an institution or artist to exercise auto-censorship.The most obvious comparisons will be with the Blackmer and Atabey collections, and there are many books here from those distinguished sources, but Mr Koç’s library now exceeds those in both breadth and depth. Asked whether he is concerned about the threat of censorship or self-censorship at Arter, he says: “All forms of art can be a very strong platform for freedom of expression. Chanting against secularism, protesters attacked a Ron Mueck sculpture of a naked man presented in a tiled fireplace, which they possibly mistook for a mihrab, the prayer niche in a mosque.įereli, who co-curated the show, describes the incident as “singular” and ultimately counter-productive, since “people of all walks-secular and conservative” then flocked to see the display. While the seven inaugural displays remain under wraps, future plans include a stage work with an international sculptor and an opera co-commissioned with IKSV for 2021, as well as an exhibition of Ömer Koç’s collection in spring 2022.Ĭonservative Islamists were outraged by a show of Koç’s art at an Ottoman villa in Istanbul in 2017. Including the collection and the building, the opening costs amount to more than €120m, according to the Koç Foundation. m of flexible galleries, two theatres and a sculpture terrace, the museum is designed to “enable artists to think differently”, Fereli says. They include pieces by major international names such as Sigmar Polke, Mona Hatoum and Theaster Gates as well as Turkey’s Sarkis and Ayşe Erkmen. This has since swelled to more than 1,300 works-roughly half by Turkish artists-which will be at the core of the new museum, Fereli says. Arter, which Koç chairs, opened in 2010 with a show of around 160 works from the fledgling collection. In 2007, Koç Holding became the main sponsor of the Istanbul Biennial and the foundation started buying contemporary art. The new direction was a passion project for Ömer Koç, third-generation scion of the Koc family and a prominent art collector. It was “what Turkey needed”, he says, to “compensate for the rather big gap” in the education system, where “analytical thinking and discovering your own creativity is not really encouraged”. Appointed in 2005 as cultural adviser to the foundation, Fereli devised a strategy defined by contemporary art. It is a vision that he says springs from his background as head of the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts (IKSV), the umbrella organisation behind the city’s film, theatre, music and jazz festivals as well as the biennial.Īrter is backed by the Vehbi Koç Foundation, established 50 years ago by one of Turkey’s richest industrialists. Thirty-five exhibitions and more than 180 art commissions produced in almost a decade at the previous space were a “testing ground”, Fereli says, for an institution that aims to foster “contemporary artistic production across all disciplines, from music to dance, theatre to sonic arts, film to literature”. It is due to open on 13 September, during the preview of the 16th Istanbul Biennial. m building in the central Dolapdere district designed by Grimshaw Architects.

omer koc art collection

So promises its director, Melih Fereli, who is overseeing the move from the “small white cube” on Istiklal Street to a new 18,000 sq. Arter, one of Turkey’s leading contemporary art non-profits, is graduating to a museum that will be a “game changer” for Istanbul.













Omer koc art collection