Rockheim (also called Det nasjonale opplevelsessenteret for pop og rock, The National Discovery Centre for Pop and Rock, and Det nasjonale museet for populærmusikk, The National Museum for Popular Music) is Norway's national museum for popular music from the 1950s to the present. It is a division of Museene i Sør-Trøndelag (Sør-Trøndelag Museums) and is housed in a former grain warehouse in Trondheim. It opened in 2010; since 2013, the director has been Sissel Guttormsen. The museum also has a virtual presence, Virtuelle Rockheim, which launched in 2009, and since 2011 musicians and groups have been chosen for the Rockheim Hall of Fame.

Rockheim, photographed in 2011
The 1950s room in the permanent exhibit features a Ford Thunderbird.
In the 1970s room, a tour bus has magazine readers embedded between the seats.
The Ronni Room, where visitors can try playing rock guitar
Mounting Robert Meyer's portrait of The Pussycats for the opening exhibition

History and administration

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The idea for the museum goes back to 1998; the Ministry of Culture began planning eight years later and in 2007 Bratterøkaia AS won the commission to create it.[1] It was to have opened in 2009, but completion of the building was delayed by a contractor bankruptcy and a fire.[2][3][4] It officially opened on 5 August 2010.[5][6]

Rockheim is housed in a 1919 grain warehouse in Trondheim. To roughly double the space available, a new sixth floor was added in the form of a cantilevered 'box', which is clad in glass decorated with reproductions of album covers and with changeable back-lighting provided by 13,000 individually controllable LEDs; the public can affect the colours by using cellphones.[2][7][8] A "black box" building for performances was also added; the design envisaged this being covered by climbing plants.[8] The architects for the conversion were Pir II [no][9] and for the grounds, Agraff AS. The conversion was awarded the City of Trondheim's 2010 building award.[10] The building has 400 square metres (4,300 sq ft) of floor space, of which half is exhibit space. The building and installations cost 300 million kroner.

The museum is a division of Museene i Sør-Trøndelag. It was headed by Arvid Esperø during planning and construction and until 2011, when Petter Myhr became the director;[11] he was succeeded in 2013 by Sissel Guttormsen.[12]

Permanent and virtual exhibits

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The primary mission of the museum is to preserve and document Norwegian popular music. The permanent exhibit, for which the lead designer was Canadian Stacey Spiegel,[2] takes the form of a journey through Norwegian music and cultural history from the 1950s to the present. It occupies 320 square metres (3,400 sq ft) in the building's top-floor box, and devotes a room to each decade. The exhibition has many interactive components. Visitors first encounter an interactive map of Norway, can select the videos shown in each room, and there are three discovery rooms: in the Ronni Room they can try playing guitar with guidance from Ronni Le Tekrø, and in the Hiphop Room they can experiment with DJing, graffiti art and breakdancing. In Virtuelle Rockheim, launched on 21 August 2009, they can manipulate an avatar to explore a selection of the exhibits in 3D. Spiegel, who also designed the virtual museum, predicted in 2008 that Rockheim would be "the world's most technically sophisticated virtual museum";[13] it was Norway's first online museum.[3]

Temporary exhibitions

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The museum opened with a temporary exhibition of photographs by Robert Meyer titled Icons of the 60's.[7] Other temporary exhibitions have been Jukeboks! (jukebox), Wenches Verden (on Wenche Myhre), Innenfor/utenfor (inside/outside; photographs by Peter Beste) and Teigens Tivoli (on Jahn Teigen).[14]

Hall of Fame

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The Rockheim Hall of Fame honours individuals and groups for their contributions to Norwegian popular music. Inductees must have debuted at least 25 years before and are chosen annually by a jury.[15][16] a-ha, Åge Aleksandersen, Jokke & Valentinerne, Wenche Myhre and Alf Prøysen were the first to be inducted, on 5 September 2011.[17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Kultur- og kirkedepartementet, "Det nasjonale opplevelsessenteret for pop og rock i Trondheim vil ligge på Brattøra", Press release, Government of Norway, 19 September 2007 (in Norwegian).
  2. ^ a b c Elizabeth Hopkirk, "Rockheim opens in Norway", Building.co.uk, 19 August 2010.
  3. ^ a b Kristin Agerlie, "Her er Trondheims nye trekkplaster", NRK, 5 August 2010 (in Nynorsk).
  4. ^ Kristin Agerlie, Thor Amund Hagen and Ole Johan Ramfjord, "Sveising muleg årsak til brann", NRK, 30 October 2009 (in Nynorsk).
  5. ^ Jonas Skybakmoen, "Rocken kommer heim", Adressa, 5 August 2010, updated 20 June 2012 (in Norwegian)
  6. ^ NTB, "Endelig et rockehjem for deg", Dagbladet, 6 August 2010 (in Norwegian).
  7. ^ a b Terje Mosnes, "Drømmeslott for rockevåkne", Dagbladet, 6 August 2010 (in Norwegian).
  8. ^ a b [Pir II], "Warehouse represents Norwegian rock 'n' roll", World Architecture News, 29 November 2012.
  9. ^ Eigil Forbord, Kilkk.no, "Rockemuseet venter på deg", Dagbladet, 11 April 2010 (in Norwegian).
  10. ^ Grete Kristin Hennissen, "Rockheim fikk Trondheims byggeskikkpris", Arkitektnytt.no, 30 November 2010 (in Norwegian).
  11. ^ Joakim Slettebak Wangen and Frode Singsaas, "Petter Myhr blir Rockheim-sjef", Adressa, 25 November 2010, updated 11 April 2012 (in Norwegian)
  12. ^ "Ny Rockheim-Sjef", Adressa, 30 September 2013 (in Norwegian).
  13. ^ Stian Wallum, "Lover verdens mest sofistikerte museum", Adressa, 12 August 2008, updated 17 April 2012 (in Norwegian).
  14. ^ Skiftende utstillinger, Rockheim (in Norwegian)
  15. ^ Om Hall of Fame, Rockheim, retrieved 23 February 2016 (in Norwegian).
  16. ^ Arve Henriksen, "Norsk musikk får eget 'Hall of fame'", Aftenposten, 12 October 2011 (in Norwegian).
  17. ^ Magne Gisvold, "Disse innlemmes i Hall of Fame", Rockheim, 5 September 2011 (in Norwegian)
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63°26′19″N 010°24′3″E / 63.43861°N 10.40083°E / 63.43861; 10.40083