Gaudà House-Museum (in Catalan: Casa Museu GaudÃ), located within the Park Güell in Barcelona was the residence of Antoni Gaudà for almost 20 years, from 1906 till the end of 1925. On 28 September 1963 it was opened as a historic home museum and nowadays houses a collection of furniture and objects designed by the architect.
History
At the end of the 19th century, Catalan industrialist Eusebi Güell i Bacigalupi, after a stay in England, returned to Barcelona with the intention to build a garden city for the Catalan bourgeoisie, on the grounds of the property Can Muntaner de Dalt, which he had acquired in 1899. He commissioned the project, which envisaged the construction of sixty houses with garden and all the services necessary, to Antoni GaudÃ. In 1914 the works were stopped and the project was not completed.
Only two of the houses envisaged were finally built: doctor Trias i Domènechâs House and what is nowadays Gaudà House-Museum which had to serve as a lure for potential land-buyers. These houses were added to the old house, that already existed in the place and whose owner was Eusebi Güell himself.
The model property, designed by architect Francesc Berenguer i Mestres, built by contractor Josep Casanovas i Pardo and signed by Gaudà himself, was built between 1903 and 1905. It was on sale but it attracted no purchasers. In 1906, Gaudà bought the house and lived there with his father and niece. His father died that very same year, and his niece in 1912. Since then, Gaudà lived there alone until the end of 1925, when, a few months before his death in 1926, moved to the workshop of the Sagrada FamÃlia Basilica. In his will, the architect donated the house to the Foundation Board of La Sagrada FamÃlia, which sold it to the Chiappo Arietti couple. In 1960 the Friends of Gaudà association started a campaign so as to purchase the house to the Chiappo Ariettiâs descendants in order to convert it into a museum. Three years later, it opened as Gaudà House-Museum. Josep Maria Garrut had been its chairman since the museum opened to the public until his death in 2008. In 1992 the house was donated to the Construction Board of La Sagrada FamÃlia Foundation.
The Building
The building has four floors. The ground and first floors are dedicated to the collection opened to the public. The basement is not open to the public and the second floor houses the Enric Casanelles Library, which can be accessed with prior permission.
As for the collection, some rooms, such as the bedroom, the study or the inner door, as well as some personal Gaudà belongings, evoke memories of when the architect lived in this house. They also host a great exhibition of furniture designed by Gaudà for buildings such as Casa Batlló, Casa Calvet, Casa Milà , Casa Vicens or the Colònia Güellâs crypt, that along with the wrought iron elements also designed by the architect - exhibited in the garden- are the most valuable objects of the collection. The collection also includes furniture, sculptures, paintings, drawings and other objects of Gaudà coworkers that are exhibited in several rooms of the museum.
Bibliography
- BASSEGODA, Joan i GARRUT, Josep M. (1969), Guia de GaudÃ, Barcelona: Ediciones literarias y cientÃficas, p. 19-29
- BASSEGODA, Joan. (1989), El gran GaudÃ, Sabadell: Editorial AUSA. ISBN 84-86329-44-2, p. 387-390 i 501-503
- GARRUT, Josep M. (1984), «La Casa-Museu Gaudà amb pròleg i dues parts» Antoni Gaudà (1852-1926), Fundació Caixa de Pensions. ISBN 84-505-0683-2
- GARRUT, Josep M. (2002), Casa-Museu Gaudà (1852-1926), Barcelona: Andrés Morón. ISBN 84-931058-1-3, ISBN 84-931058-2-1 i ISBN 84-931058-3-X
- GUEILBURT, LuÃs. (2003), Gaudà i el Registre de la Propietat, Barcelona: Institut Gaudà de la Construcció. ISBN 84-688-1124-6, p. 149.157
External links
- casamuseugaudi.org