The History of CAFA Art Museum
The first specialized art museum built after the establishment of the People’s Republic of China
The Central Academy of Fine Arts GalleryCAFA Art Museum
The history of CAFA Art Museum can be traced back to the early 1950s. Originally called the “Central Academy of Fine Arts Gallery,” the museum was located on the old CAFA site at Shuaifuyuan on Xiaowei Hutong in Beijing’s Wangfujing. Designed by noted architect Zhang Kaiji, the Gallery was the first specialized art museum built after the establishment of the People’s Republic of China. In 1998, the Gallery’s name was changed to “CAFA Art Museum.”
The exteriorCAFA Art Museum
In October 2008, the new museum building opened on the CAFA campus at No. 8 Huajiadi South Street in Beijing’s Chaoyang District, designed by noted Japanese architect Arata Isozaki. In late 2010, CAFA Art Museum was named in the first list of Key National Museums. Past museum directors have included Dong Xiwen, Yang Yun, Sun Zixi, Jiao Kequn, Wang Xiao, Tang Pei, Pan Gongkai, and Wang Huangsheng. The current director is Zhang Zikang.
A sketch of CAFAM by Arata IsozakiCAFA Art Museum
The new building for the CAFA Art Museum was designed by noted Japanese architect Arata Isozaki. This is the architect’s first museum design in China.
A sketch of CAFAM by Arata IsozakiCAFA Art Museum
A sketch of CAFAM by Arata IsozakiCAFA Art Museum
CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The museum has a floor area of 3,546 square meters and covers a total of 14,777 square meters.
The exteriorCAFA Art Museum
The museum is located on a curved site. The exterior stone walls and the curved roof gradually meet to form a shell shaped like a rounded boomerang.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
Large glass walls at the entrance and exit add to the transparency of the building while also meeting lighting needs.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The external wallCAFA Art Museum
The grey-green stone plates on the exterior of the museum coordinate with the grey bricks of the other buildings on the Central Academy of Fine Arts campus, finding unity within difference.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The museum is 24 meters high, with a total of six levels—four above ground and two below ground.
CAFAM InteriorCAFA Art Museum
The two floors below ground contain the offices, storage, and restoration rooms.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
CAFAM InteriorCAFA Art Museum
The first floor provides a large public space for visitors, with a café, a multi-functional meeting room, and an auditorium that can accommodate 380 people.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The second floor is a relatively closed space, lit entirely by artificial light to avoid damaging artworks with UV light from the sun.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The space is illuminated with Erco lights from Germany, and granite was used as the flooring to resolve light reflections. There are also glass display cases on this level, providing the ideal secure space for the exhibition of artistic treasures.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
The highest point in the ceiling on the third floor is 11 meters high, with a vast interior space free of pillars.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
Natural light illuminates the space which, in conjunction with the fourth-floor space, these halls can accommodate artworks in a range of sizes.
Inside CAFAMCAFA Art Museum
Groundbreaking ceremony: Architect Arata Isozaki (middle and former CAFA president Pan Gongkai (right)CAFA Art Museum
Groundbreaking ceremony: Architect Arata Isozaki (middle) and former CAFA president Pan Gongkai (right)
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