- Unfulfilled talent? Two-time champion Alonso clocks up 400th F1 race
- Guardiola praises 'incredible' mentality of Man City stars
- Chelsea boss Maresca wants more 'leadership' from captain James
- US issues historic apology for Native American boarding school atrocities
- Moody's cuts France outlook, opening door to credit downgrade
- Drone sparks fire on Kyiv residential building, one dead
- Gaza ministry says two children die in hospital in Israeli raid
- Wood brace fires Forest as Leicester boss Cooper loses reunion
- Dodgers draw on Bryant's 'Mamba mentality' for World Series
- 'Fascist' row overshadows glitzy night on US campaign trail
- Modern art museum breathes new life into downtown Warsaw
- Russell tops crash-hit Mexico GP practice
- Fils, Shelton set for friendly fire in Basel semi-finals
- Internet blackout hits Mozambique capital after election protests
- Yankees, Dodgers poised for World Series blockbuster
- 'Catfish' predator who drove US girl to suicide jailed for life in N.Ireland
- NASA astronaut hospitalized after return from ISS
- Biden apologizes for Native American boarding school atrocities
- Mexico rules out designating drug violence as 'terrorism'
- Emery wants no let-up from Aston Villa
- Boeing exploring sale of space business: report
- G20 affirms commitment to transition from fossil fuels
- Shami misses India's tour of Australia as Easwaran named as potential Rohit cover
- BHP, Vale agree to pay $30bn damages for Brazil dam disaster
- 75 sickened as McDonald's severe E. Coli outbreak expands
- Turkmenistan's 'Gateway to Hell' lit gas pit faces closure
- Kickboxing takes Senegal by storm despite tight funds
- Waymo ramps up robotaxi push with $5.6 bn in funding
- Elon Musk all-in for Trump as Moscow denies secret Putin talks
- Covid lessons learned? UN summit mulls plan for healthy planet, and humans
- Borthwick unveils new contracts for leading England players
- Sexual assault scandal rocks Spain's 'most feminist' govt
- France must make 'credible' progress on deficit: finance minister
- Stock markets diverge going into weekend
- BHP, Vale agree to pay $30bn compensation for Brazil dam disaster
- Verstappen says 'definitely' his intention to remain at Red Bull
- Mbappe can launch Madrid career in first Clasico
- A monumental dump and Obama the rapper: an offbeat US campaign week
- Biden to apologize for abusive Native American boarding schools
- Pressure is part of manager's life, says troubled West Ham boss Lopetegui
- Gaza ministry says Israel forces detaining hundreds at hospital
- Hirscher confirms return from retirement at World Cup opener
- IMF raises concerns about effects of Sudan conflict on neighbors
- Seoul slams Russian treaty with N. Korea, Zelensky urges 'tangible pressure'
- De Zerbi hails Greenwood as Marseille await Paris Saint-Germain
- Under-fire Ten Hag blames injuries for derailing Man Utd
- Wounded Arsenal must show 'ruthless mentality' against Liverpool: Arteta
- Howe challenges Newcastle stars to step up
- UK's Labour govt prepares to unveil its first budget
- New Zealand eye history after Santner's 7-53 in India Test
Modern art museum breathes new life into downtown Warsaw
Warsaw's new modern art museum building opened on Friday, a minimalist white concrete structure meant to revitalise an abandoned area of the Polish capital long-defined by an imposing Stalin-era palace.
Warsaw, a city of 1.8 million people, did not until now have a proper site for its modern art museum. Instead, the cultural institution showcased its collections at various temporary locations.
Compared by some to a shoebox, shipping container or bunker, the new museum building designed by US architect Thomas Phifer has been hailed by others as a pearl of minimalism.
Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski called the opening "a historical event" for both Polish art and the city.
"Warsaw has been changing very dynamically, but the city's centre had kept its look from a few decades ago," he told reporters on Thursday.
- Stalin's legacy -
Nazi Germany destroyed 90 percent of the Polish capital during World War II, leaving its downtown a ruin upon liberation.
The communists that came to power in the war's aftermath decided not to reconstruct the area and instead built the Palace of Culture and Science, a building of Soviet-sanctioned socialist realist architecture.
More than 230 metres (750 feet) tall, it was a gift from USSR leader Joseph Stalin that for many years dominated the Polish capital.
During the communist era, the palace served as the site of mass political gatherings.
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the large empty square in front of the building became a street market, then a large rundown parking lot -- all cut off from urban life by a wide avenue.
The square was until now "anything and everything", a ramshackle spot with no clear purpose, according to architectural historian Anna Cymer.
She said "Warsaw still hasn't been able to shed its heavy historical legacy" and "break the spell cast by Stalin".
"We are finally on track to bring life back to this part of the city for everyone's benefit," Cymer added.
"The museum marks a big step towards the creation of a real downtown area and a revitalisation of the neighbourhood."
- 'Light of Warsaw' -
For the architect of the nearly 20,000-square-metre museum, the choice of location was significant and "courageous".
"They could have picked any other site in Warsaw" yet they decided to make it "the first thing built that is next to the palace, with all of its history," Phifer told reporters.
"This will be the new voice and the new home, the new town square, the new forum, the new place to meet, to encounter art and to encounter each other."
The museum, which cost 700 million zloty ($170 million) to build, has floor-to-ceiling glass on its ground floor as an invitation to all to enter.
Inside, a double staircase leads visitors to the exhibition rooms -- for now, mostly empty, with only a dozen works shown before the permanent exhibition opens in February.
Over the next two weeks, the museum will celebrate its opening with various events, concerts, dance shows and workshops.
The building's whole interior is bathed in natural light, which Phifer said was intentional.
"The light of Warsaw, this light that defines this place, is beginning to weave into the experience of the art," he said.
O.Karlsson--AMWN