Chimei Museum
The Chimei Museum is a private museum established in 1992 by Shi Wen-long of Chi Mei Corporation in Rende District, Tainan, Taiwan. The museum's collection is divided into five categories: Fine arts ; Musical instruments; Natural history and fossils; Arms and armor; Antiquities and artifacts. The museum is known for housing the world's largest violin collection and for its significant collections of ancient weapons and sculptures. Forbes magazine, in its February 1996 article on private collectors in Asia, called the Chimei Museum "one of the world's most surprising art collections." The museum moved to its current venue on Wenhua Road in 2014, and it is open to the public except on designated days.
Background
The museum was first established and housed in an administration building of the Chi Mei Corporation in 1992 by the company's founder Shi Wen-long, then relocated to the Tainan Metropolitan Park in 2014, and reopened in 2015. Shi is known for his collection of antique violins housed in the museum. Besides being an entrepreneur, Shi is also an amateur violinist who has performed in public many times. To improve the level of classical music and western art in Taiwan, he founded the Chi Mei Culture Foundation in 1977 and has been providing scholarships through the Chimei Arts Award to developing artists in both classical music and fine arts since 1988.Born in 1928 during wartime to a family of 10 children, Shi found escape at a "small local museum in Tainan." He later founded Chi Mei Museum in 1992 with the idea of building a museum for all, especially the underprivileged and those "who don't have a chance to travel and see museums abroad." He was an amateur performing concert violinist. Shi Wen-long died on 18 November 2023, at the age of 95.
Building
The museum was designed by architect Tsai Yi-cheng based on a design brief that it inspire a cultural renaissance by incorporating the best of western culture. Because of this the museum has a large number of domes, pilasters, and columns. It is energy efficient and has a LEED Silver rating. Its facades are decorated with all three Classical orders: Corinthian, Ionic, and Doric. The museum's main building cost NT$2 billion to build.The museum has a complete luthier's workshop to support the instrument collection.
Grounds
A replica of the Bassin d'Apollo greets visitors at the museum entrance. The 1:1 replica was unveiled in 2014. The museum commissioned French artist Gills Perrault in 2008 to reproduce the Fountain of Apollo, same as the one in Palace of Versailles. It took three years for modern laser measuring and the plaster mold to be made in France for the reproduction sculpture, and another three years to carve the marbles in the city of Carrara, Italy.Between the Chimei Museum and the Fountain of Apollo sits the "Olympus Bridge", which features statues of the Twelve Olympians on both sides.
The "Muse Plaza" is located between the Olympus Bridge and the main building, named after the Muses, the mythological figures that gave rise to the term "museum".
Exhibitions
The museum has several exhibition areas, including fine arts, natural history and fossils, arms and armour, musical instruments, and sculptures. The museum has a collection of European paintings from the 13th to the 20th century, presenting the development of western art. The historic weapon exhibition presents weapons from prehistoric time, the Bronze Age, the Iron Age to modern times. The collection features few artifacts from Taiwan or areas close to it as the main idea of the collection is to allow Taiwanese people to see artwork and pieces that they otherwise would have to travel a long way and spend a lot of money to see. The museum's founder grew up disadvantaged and wants to ensure that local children can be inspired by global culture even if their families do not have the resources to travel extensively.Musical instruments
Wen-Long Shi, the founder of the museum, was an amateur violinist and the Museum's collection began as his own personal collection. The museum collects musical instruments of historical significance, in particular violins and other string instruments by Antonio Stradivari, Guarneri del Gesù, Jacob Stainer, Amati, Rogeri, Joseph Guarneri Filius Andrea, Vincenzo Rugeri, Seraphin, Gagliano, Guadagnini and other famous artisans. The collection is noted for the Guarneri del Gesù "Ole Bull" violin of 1744, which is believed to be the last work of the famed artisan., the museum houses more than 1,370 violins and has allowed more than 3,000 violinists to borrow from the collection, with more than 220 violins out on loan. The museum loans the antique instruments to distinguished musicians free of charge. In 1999, Yo-Yo Ma borrowed the Pawle Stradivarius cello for a concert in Taipei. In 2015, Yu-Chien Tseng won the silver prize at the 15th International Tchaikovsky Competition with the Castelbarco-Tarisio Guarnerius violin from the museum. the collection was the world's largest.Notable instruments
- Viotti Stradivarius
Artworks
- The Madonna of Humility - Paolo di Giovanni Fei
- Suffer the Little Children to Come unto Me - Lucas Cranach the Younger
- Saint Martin and the Beggar - El Greco
- Charity - Jacques Blanchard
- The Last Tears - Narcisse Virgilio Díaz de la Peña
- Charity - Friedrich von Amerling
- The Blessing of the Wheat - Jules Breton
- Two Cyclists - Yevgeniy Prokopov, Nikolay Oleinik.
Reproductions from the museum