Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro


The Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro is a museum located in northeastern Flamengo Park, in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. It is in the Centro district, west of Santos Dumont Airport, on Guanabara Bay.

Architecture

Flamengo Park was an urban planning project on the coast of Rio under the direction of Roberto Burle Marx in the 1950s and 1960s. The Modernist concrete museum building, designed by Affonso Eduardo Reidy, was completed in 1955. The museum's landmark Modernist gardens were designed by Burle Marx.
The main building has a dramatic cadence of external pillar elements, connected by longitudinal beams, providing a galley level free of internal columns or structural walls. The park was created on landfill in the bay, so the pillars footings reach down.
A large outdoor terrace is framed by the entrance façades of the main building and theater wing. The northern façade has aluminum shutters to control the amount of natural light entering the gallery space during the winter solstice period. The windows of the gallery are oriented to the north and south.
An inner courtyard was also designed by Burle Marx. A broad spiral ramp element reaches an upper level, with a roof terrace, restaurant, bar, and lounge overlooking Guanabara Bay, Sugarloaf, and Rio's other granitic mountain formations.

Scope

Affonso Eduardo Reidy's essay for the meaning of the museum expressed:

The museum's scope is as an arts center, and includes:
  1. exhibitions — galleries for the permanent collection and travelling shows.
  2. school of art — with lecture and studio spaces.
  3. theater — for concerts, plays, classical ballets, film exhibitions, and conferences.
  4. operations — public services, workshops, collections warehouses, and administration offices.

    1978 fire

On July 8, 1978, a rough fire caused by a cigarette or due to an electrical failure, destroyed 90% of the artworks – including artworks from Pablo Picasso, Miró, Salvador Dalí, Max Ernst, Paul Klee, Diego Rivera, René Magritte, Ivan Serpa, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Manabu Mabe and others – and all artworks showed in a big retrospective of artist Joaquin Torres García.