Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography

Collection: 25 Years of Huis Marseille

Until 12 October

Online exhibition

Since 1999, Huis Marseille has collected around 750 works of contemporary photography, ranging from masters such as Thomas Struth, Andreas Gursky, and Deana Lawson to emerging talents like Jamie Hawkesworth and Julie Greve. This collection is now also available online.

Collection

The origins of Huis Marseille’s photo collection lies in the dowry that the museum received at its inauguration in 1999: fifty photographs from the private collection of the De Pont family. They included work by such leading photographers as Andreas Gursky, Thomas Ruff and Thomas Struth. These monumental works of representatives of the Düsseldorfer Schule set the tone for a contemporary collection that was closely linked to developments in (conceptual) art, and they launched an exhibition programme that was curated in collaboration with living photographers. Over the following fifteen years, these starting points were formulated in more detail. Besides Dutch photography – with the prominent photographer Jacqueline Hassink as a major representative – Japanese and South African photography became two new spearheads in the collection. This focus is revealed in the collection by work from Naoya Hatakeyama and Yuki Onodera on the one hand and David Goldblatt and Zanele Muholi on the other. The European artists represented include leading names such as Luc Delahaye and Valérie Belin.

Choices

For every name that appears in the Huis Marseille collection, one might cite another that does not. The collection does not attempt, however, to be an accurate representation of contemporary photographic history; rather, it reflects the personal choices of an individualistic, privately funded museum. This has resulted in collaborations with a wide variety of photographers whose work is synonymous with interesting contemporary developments in art photography. The museum’s collection and its exhibitions are intrinsically linked. A new acquisition often leads to collaboration with the photographer and ultimately to an exhibition, and by the same token, an exhibition will usually lead to new acquisitions for the collection.

Visitor information

Access

Date

Until 12 October

September 2025
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Location

Online

Organizer

Huis Marseille, Museum for Photography

Keizersgracht 401
1016 EK Amsterdam
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020 - 53 18 989

Open today from 10:00 until 18:00

Opening hours next week
Day Opening hours
Tue - Wed 10:00 - 18:00
Thu 10:00 - 21:00
Fri - Sun 10:00 - 18:00

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