Louis Couperus Museum


The Louis Couperus Museum was a museum located in the Archipelbuurt neighbourhood of The Hague. The museum celebrated the life and work of the Belle Époque writer Louis Couperus. On 15 May 2024 the museum closed due to lack of funding.

Location

The museum was founded in 1996 by Caroline de Westenholz, stepdaughter of Albert Vogel jr., a biographer of Couperus, and housed in his former art gallery. The museum, which was located at Javastraat 17, was within walking distance of a number of addresses where Louis Couperus lived, including:

The museum

The museum housed various objects related to Couperus, such as manuscripts and personal belongings. The rooms were stylistically designed to give the impression of how the residence would have appeared in Couperus' day and age. It featured Couperus' desk, and a portrait of his father, John Ricus Couperus. Twice a year the museum organised exhibitions on themes concerning Couperus' work or life. In addition to the themed exhibitions, the museum organised walking-tours along places of significance to Couperus and his work, such as the houses where characters from his novels lived.
Couperus' desk, manuscripts and personal letters formed part of the collection of the Letterkundig Museum. Other items, such as Couperus' collected publications and a life-sized mannequin of Couperus, belonged to the collection of the museum itself.