Thomas Krens, director of the New York-based Guggenheim Museum, threw cold water on media speculation that Taichung could soon be home to a branch museum during his brief visit to Taichung this week, noting that the project would have to surmount a daunting number of non-artistic hurdles, including adequate financial backing.
Krens, who arrived in Taichung on Tuesday at the invitation of Mayor Jason Hu (
Despite his meeting with the mayor, local officials, scholars and architects -- who presented proposals for a Taichung Guggenheim Museum -- the director said that a feasibility study had yet to begin.
"My being here doesn't signify any commitment. ... This isn't an active project. My being here doesn't mean one thing or another. I've visited 100 cities in the last two years," Krens told the Taipei Times, adding that his brief visit did not allow him to comment on Taichung's suitability for a project.
Yesterday, the director reportedly skipped planned meetings with Taichung city councilors and a group of Taipei architects, opting to visit the National Palace Museum in Taipei instead.
Krens said that the primary responsibility for launching a project lay with local authorities, who had to find financial backing and address a variety of practical issues, including adequate local infrastructure and political support.
Any city requesting a Guggenheim feasibility study would first have to pay US$2 million, which would cover the museum's analysis reports, architectural studies and the hiring of professional consultants to evaluate such an investment.
"It's not any good to build a museum that no one goes to, or in a city that no one visits, or one that is in an unsustainable position. That's not in anyone's interest," Krens said.
Due to the high chances that the city or museum or both would find reasons not to continue after a feasibility study is conducted, the director said such proposals were usually approached with low expectations.
In the event that a project was approved, local officials would then have to find funding, which runs into the "hundreds of millions of US dollars," he said.
Noting ongoing Guggenheim projects in Rio de Janeiro and St. Petersburg, Krens said that his museum currently had no plans in Asia, following the cancellation of a project in Tokyo, but added that an Asian project would be attractive, given the region's size and significance.
Despite reports that Taichung was also competing with Shanghai to get a museum, Taichung is apparently the only Asian city to be actively pursuing the Guggenheim, according to local art authorities.
Beatrice Peini Gysen-Hsieh (
Furthermore, the museum's overtures to other cities, including Hong Kong and Singapore, had failed to win any interest, she said.
Since winning the Taichung mayor's seat about six months ago, Hu has widely publicized a desire to elevate Taichung's profile on the world stage and boost investment and tourism by bringing a Guggenheim to the city.



