Cisternerne

The Cisterns (Danish: Cisternerne) is a museum in Copenhagen, Denmark. The Cisterns is an integral part of the Frederiksberg Museums (Frederiksbergmuseerne) acting as a venue for art exhibitions and other events where the singularity of its architecture and atmosphere remains a core attraction. [1]

The Cisterns: A Cave within a City Located under Frederiksberg Hill in the heart of Søndermarken Park, The Cisterns is the only dripstone cave in Denmark. The natural formation of stalactites and stalagmites are not uncommon for concrete structures, yet none anywhere can offer the sheer magnitude and diversity of those found here.

Cisternerne (2007)
Cisternerne entrance

In February 2009 Forbes listed Cisternerne as one of the more unusual exhibition spaces in Europe.[2]

History

The Cisterns, an abandoned subterranean reservoir, once contained the supply of drinking water for the Danish capital and could hold as much as 16 million liters of clean water. Excavation began in 1856. Taking only three years to complete, the great structure quickly helped to alleviate many of the water supply problems of the day; but by 1933, the city’s cisterns ceased their function as a reservoir for drinking water, and they were finally drained in 1981.

In 1996, during Copenhagen’s one-year turn as the designated European City of Culture (later known as European Capital of Culture), the underground water reservoir was put to use as an exhibition space. The expedition was a joint initiative between the City of Frederiksberg and gallery owner Max Seidenfaden, who continued to run The Cisterns as a museum of modern glass art from 2001 to 2013.[3]

References

  1. "The Cisterns". visitcopenhagen.com. Retrieved October 1, 2019.
  2. "Europe's Oddball Art Galleries". Forbes. Retrieved 2009-04-04.
  3. "Max Seidenfaden". artnet.com. Retrieved October 1, 2019.

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