Q Life Magazine Q Magazine June 2019 | Page 13

Qatar in Colour | coloured concrete harmonises with the desert environment, so that the building appears to grow out of the ground. Inside, the structure of interlocking disks continues, creating an extraordinary variety of irregularly shaped volumes. Jean Nouvel says: “To imagine a desert rose as a basis for design was a very advanced idea, even a utopian one. To construct a building with great curved disks, intersections, and cantilevered angles – the kind of shapes made by a desert rose – we had to meet enormous technical challenges. “This building is at the cutting edge of technology, like Qatar itself. As a result, it is a total object: an experience that is at once architectural, spatial, and sensory, with spaces inside that exist nowhere else.” The museum is organised into three chapters – ‘Beginnings’, ‘Life in Qatar’, and ‘The Modern History of Qatar’ – taking visitors from the geological period long before the peninsula was inhabited, through to the present day. There is also space for temporary exhibitions. Because Qatar continues to develop at such a rapid pace, the work of the NMoQ is far from finished, however. It will continue to document the history of a rising nation through new exhibits and exhibitions, playing a vital role in Qatar’s cultural memory for years to come. | The restored palace of Sheikh Abdullah bin Jassim Al Thani lies at the heart of the NMoQ 13