13.05.2024
Professor Mogens A. Morgen views cultural heritage as a living entity that should inform our way of building. His approach is ‘The whole before the parts’.
Mogens A. Morgen wished to be photographed for this article in the Rainbow Panorama at ARoS. For a man who works with architectural heritage, one might have expected a more aged building as the background. However, the professor naturally has a point about his choice.
‘Cultural heritage is considered museum-like, but it is not. It is about high architectural quality in construction, good sustainable building techniques, but also an artistic finesse, as exemplified by the Rainbow Panorama,’ he says.
But how did he get here? Why is he standing on top of Aarhus, looking down at the former business archive designed by Hack Kampmann? It is due in no small part to an unexpected encounter.
‘I believe it matters greatly which people you meet along your way. I had a fantastic teacher at the Art High School in Holbæk who opened my eyes to art and architectural history. Pierre Beskow’s teaching led me to apply for art history at the University of Copenhagen, but it was too much head and not enough body. That’s why I switched to the School of Architecture in Copenhagen,’ says Mogens A. Morgen.
10×3
After his studies, he worked for ten years at an architectural firm. One of the projects was the restoration of the Art Society Gl. Strand, which helped to strengthen his interest in cultural heritage.
‘The windows were from the 1700s, and you had to relate to the entire original structure and, of course, bring it into our time as a contemporary art gallery.’
The experience meant that Mogens A. Morgen followed his ten years in architectural practice with ten years in administrative service as head of department at the Agency for Culture and Palaces. This set the stage for the next logical step: his appointment as a professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture, where he will soon celebrate his ten-year anniversary this August.
Mogens A. Morgen was born in 1959 in the Nordvest quarter of Copenhagen. His parents came from working-class backgrounds and had no higher education, but according to Mogens A. Morgen, they managed to join the middle-class thanks to the welfare state that took shape in the post-war period. His mother worked for a time at Værløse Air Base, while his father was a copywriter and advertising man – and, among other things, the creator of the famous (in Denmark, ed.) slogan, ‘Say Jolly to your cola.’
Professor
As a professor at the Aarhus School of Architecture, Mogens A. Morgen is particularly motivated by the encounters with engaged students who share his interest in architectural heritage. These encounters also provide an opportunity to inspire others in the same way he was inspired at the Art High School in Holbæk in his time.
MÅSKE ER DU OGSÅ INTERESSERET I DETTE