There’s a certain fatigue that sets in after you’ve been inside a museum for an hour. It’s less physical than mental, and has to do with the stress of taking in a great deal all at once. So smaller museums often offer a finer experience. The collections are strongly focused and you’re not exhausted by the time you’re through. The Design Museum in Gent strikes me this way. The museum has a smart collection of objects by well-known designers like Victor Horta and Christopher Dresser, as well as lesser-known ones, like Gustave Serrurier-Boy and Borek Sipak.
What’s best is how informal the displays are, and how many of the objects have been left unrestored, in their real, battered condition. Less than a design museum, it seems, at times, like a museum of old everyday things. I’m accustomed to seeing the Wassily chair in shining leather and chrome, in stores, in corporate waiting rooms, and in apartments. But to see a vintage one, with cracked leather and spotted chrome, sitting right on the floor, along with other contemporary pieces, all similarly worn, is refreshing. It reminds you how old (nearly a hundred years) so much canonical modern furniture is, and that it was intended to be used, not stuck on a pedestal at MoMa.