The City Collection / De Stadscollectie / La collection municipale
Ensemble
The city of Antwerp started in 2021 with the development of a city collection of contemporary art. The artworks will be given on long-term loan to the Museum of Contemporary Art Antwerp (M HKA), which will develop the collection together with the city. In the first year, the acquisitions for the new collection will focus on young artists living in Antwerp. This will provide them with support – both financially and in terms of appreciation – which today is even more urgent than ever.
Antwerp is the city of the avant-garde par excellence, with a diverse, artist-driven and internationally oriented art scene. This art scene has also served as a basis for international developments, through commercial galleries and world-class public initiatives. In the past, this has only led to the creation of patrimony in a very fragmentary manner. This is why the city of Antwerp is now starting with the development of a city collection. To this end, it will make use of the expertise and capacity of the M HKA and in this way strengthen the museum's efforts in terms of acquisition and expansion of the collection.
The aim of The City Collection is not only to create a diverse and international contemporary art patrimony, but above all to valorise and support artists connected with Antwerp - and in this context, also give visibility to galleries and public initiatives that bring contemporary art in Antwerp to the public.
The aim is not to create a collection that is as extensive or complete as possible, but to make limited, targeted choices of museum-level works or ensembles that reflect the broader landscape. The collection will gradually develop over the years, making the mere fact of being included a sign of appreciation in itself.
The City Collection is more than a collection of local artists. It also aims to show how recent international art developments have found a breeding ground in Antwerp and continue to do so to this day. In this respect, it is the intention to purchase works from key foreign artists that are represented in Antwerp galleries today. At the same time, the city is very much aware that its own artists form part of that international landscape. Here, too, The City Collection intends to invest not only in established names, but also in the work of up-and-coming talent. In this first year, this will be the main focus - after all, our support is now even more urgent than ever.
Items
View all-

Deaf Ted, Danoota (and me)
Nadia Naveau, Deaf Ted, Danoota (and me), 2014-2021. Sculpture, drie witte bustes van gips en plasticine, te tonen op hoge sokkels, Variabele installatie op sokkels, beelden: 120 × 180 × 130 cm, 130 × 90 × 60 cm, 160 × 80 × 80 cm.
-

#revolution
Mashid Mohadjerin, #revolution, 2016. Photography, 87.7 x 144 cm.
-

No liability
Mashid Mohadjerin, No liability, 2016. Photography, 75 x 75 x 2.4 cm.
-

Magic Mirror Steel Blue
Ann Veronica Janssens, Magic Mirror Steel Blue, 2022. Sculpture, dichroic laminated glass consisting of crash glass, float and gelatin filters , 220 x 110 x 1.8 cm .
Actors
View all-

Daan Gielis
Daan Gielis: ‘twixt life and death Belgian mixed-media artist Daan Gielis (b. 1988, Beringen – Leuven, d. 2023) studied printmaking in Hass
-

Ignace Cami
Ignace Cami is an artist that gives obsolete things renewal. Playing with the notion of ‘heritage’, he questions its place as being part of t
-

Cindy Wright
No description.
-

Panamarenko
The Belgian artist Panamarenko (pseudonym of Henri Van Herwegen) studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp from 1955 to 1960 but just as
Ensembles
View all-
Portraits by Isabelle Pat...
Isabelle Pateer (°1980; lives and works in Antwerp) has built up an international reputation as a portrait and documentary photographer over
-
Acquisitions
Antwerp is widely known for its contemporary art scene. With artists, galleries and artistic initiatives that have international resonance, t
