• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

A peek into the AMO-designed + curated “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition at the National Museum of Qatar

By Justine Testado|

Monday, Apr 1, 2019

Collage from the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition. Image © OMA.

Inside the new Jean Nouvel-designed National Museum of Qatar that opened last week, the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition explores the ongoing urban and architectural development of the capital city. The curation team included Rem Koolhaas and Samir Bantal of OMA/AMO and Fatma Al Sehlawi, and the research team from the Qatar-based Atlas Bookstore.

Model of the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition. © OMA.

Designed by a team from AMO/OMA, the exhibition is designed as a timeline. Enclosed by a 115-meter-long curtain printed with historical collages, the exhibition is divided into four sections spanning 70 years of photos, architectural models, plans, texts, films, oral histories, and archival materials.

Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.
Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.
Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.

“Among the local population it found the agents, often educated abroad, who were able to channel the fluid and oral procedures of Arab tradition over time into a coherent framework of stable terms as the foundation of a municipal bureaucracy that could begin to ‘plan’, an entirely new concept in a culture used to organic growth,” Rem Koolhaas writes in his curatorial statement. “Typically a learning curve eventually flattens out. By relentlessly placing tremendous challenges before itself—a major airport, the World Cup, the Olympics, new cultural institutions like Qatar Museums, and Education City—Qatar put itself in a situation where the curve constantly became steeper.”

The exhibition is now on display through August 30, 2019.

Related

amo ● exhibition design ● national museum of qatar ● qatar ● doha ● history ● event ● middle east ● office for metropolitan architecture
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

A peek into the AMO-designed + curated “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition at the National Museum of Qatar

Best new interiors of 2026 chosen at AIA Interior Architecture Awards

Best global architecture honored at RIBA International Awards 2026

World’s most beautiful airports of 2026 chosen by Prix Versailles

New architecture and design competitions: Brick in Architecture Awards, Study Architecture Student Showcase, N.Y.C. Groceries, and New York High Falls Riverfront Market

SmithGroup’s ‘pioneering’ Philip Merrill Environmental Center wins AIA Twenty-five Year Award

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8 FINAL registration deadline is in 5 DAYS!

Here are the winners of the 2026 AIA Architecture Awards

40 emerging architects and designers under 40 from Europe honored

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Northwestern University selects 12-firm longlist to design new engineering building

New architecture and design competitions: Exploring 130 Years of American Design, Christo & Jeanne-Claude Center, 13 White Houses, and La Pyramide

Micro-architecture honored in latest Tiny House Architecture Competition

World’s most beautiful restaurants of 2026 chosen by Prix Versailles

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Design a wine tasting room in Italy! Valli Wine Tasting Room is launched!

10 can't-miss architecture & design events to see this June in London, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Detroit, San Diego, Porto, and Barcelona

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8 FINAL registration deadline is approaching!

Next page » Loading

A peek into the AMO-designed + curated “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition at the National Museum of Qatar

By Justine Testado|

Monday, Apr 1, 2019

Share

Collage from the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition. Image © OMA.

Related

amo ● exhibition design ● national museum of qatar ● qatar ● doha ● history ● event ● middle east ● office for metropolitan architecture
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)
OMA (The Office for Metropolitan Architecture)

Inside the new Jean Nouvel-designed National Museum of Qatar that opened last week, the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition explores the ongoing urban and architectural development of the capital city. The curation team included Rem Koolhaas and Samir Bantal of OMA/AMO and Fatma Al Sehlawi, and the research team from the Qatar-based Atlas Bookstore.

Model of the “Making Doha 1950-2030” exhibition. © OMA.

Designed by a team from AMO/OMA, the exhibition is designed as a timeline. Enclosed by a 115-meter-long curtain printed with historical collages, the exhibition is divided into four sections spanning 70 years of photos, architectural models, plans, texts, films, oral histories, and archival materials.

Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.
Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.
Exhibition view of “Making Doha 1950-2030” inside the National Museum of Qatar. © OMA.

“Among the local population it found the agents, often educated abroad, who were able to channel the fluid and oral procedures of Arab tradition over time into a coherent framework of stable terms as the foundation of a municipal bureaucracy that could begin to ‘plan’, an entirely new concept in a culture used to organic growth,” Rem Koolhaas writes in his curatorial statement. “Typically a learning curve eventually flattens out. By relentlessly placing tremendous challenges before itself—a major airport, the World Cup, the Olympics, new cultural institutions like Qatar Museums, and Education City—Qatar put itself in a situation where the curve constantly became steeper.”

The exhibition is now on display through August 30, 2019.

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Architect

KieranTimberlake

Architect

Philadelphia, PA, US

Architectural/Structural Drafter

New Beginnings Engineering

Architectural/Structural Drafter

Irvine, CA, US

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

DWY Landscape Architects

Senior Associate/ Project Manager

Sarasota, FL, US

Junior Architect / Architectural Designer

S20M

Junior Architect / Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer Level 2

Arthur Chabon Architect

Architectural Designer Level 2

New York, NY, US

Architectural Designer

Build Block Inc.

Architectural Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Job Captain - Education

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Job Captain - Education

San Diego, CA, US

Marketing Coordinator / EA

Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Marketing Coordinator / EA

Boston, MA, US

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Architect

Joe Serrins Studio

Architect

New York, NY, US

Next page » Loading