Amsterdam Museum | |
---|---|
Courtyard of the museum |
|
Established | 1926 |
Location | Kalverstraat 92 Amsterdam, Netherlands |
Type | Heritage centre |
Visitor figures | 199.322 (2010)[1] |
Director | Paul Spies[1] |
Website | www.amsterdammuseum.nl |
The Amsterdam Museum, until 2011 called the Amsterdams Historisch Museum, is a museum about the history of Amsterdam. Since 1975, it is located in the old city orphanage between Kalverstraat and Nieuwezijds Voorburgwal.
Contents |
The museum has been located since 1975 in a building that was originally constructed in 1580 as Amsterdam's orphanage. The building was extended by brothers Hendrick and Pieter de Keyser before Jacob van Campen rebuilt it in 1634. The orphanage continued in this building until 1960.[2]
The museum exhibits various items related to the history of Amsterdam, from the Middle Ages to the present time. Many of the original furnishings of the city orphanage are on display, as are artifacts relating to the Rasp house, the former house of correction in Amsterdam where the prisoners were forced to rasp wood to make sawdust. As of 2011, the museum manages 70,000 objects kept in various buildings and storage areas. Of those, approximately 25,000 have been photographed and are available to the public online. To celebrate the change of their name (dropping the word "Historical") and the 10th anniversary of Wikipedia on January 15, 2011, the museum "gave" Wikipedia a USB stick with the online photo collection to symbolize the public release of their high quality digital photographs made of their collection. This includes all two dimensional objects that were already free of copyright, but new is the set photos of three dimensional art.
The museum has on display paintings, models, archeological findings, photographs, but also less likely items such as a playable carillon, a "white car" (environment-friendly vehicle from the 1960s) and a real Jordaan café.