
Marres – House for Contemporary Culture
Art, Garden and Kitchen in the Heart of Maastricht
Behind a monumental facade on the Capucijnenstraat in the historic centre of Maastricht, Marres is one of the most distinctive and genuinely surprising cultural spaces in the Netherlands. Founded in 1999 and housed in a building commissioned in 1680 by Henricus Thisius van Ingenop, then mayor of Maastricht, it takes its name from the brewing family that inhabited the house for three generations in the twentieth century. When Marres opened its doors as a cultural institution, both the house and its beautiful garden were made publicly accessible for the first time — and what had been a private residence became one of the most intimate and welcoming art spaces in the country.
Marres explores contemporary art in the widest possible sense. Rather than limiting itself to exhibitions of visual art, the institution works at the intersection of disciplines that rarely share the same room: visual artists, musicians, theatre makers, dancers, scientists, perfumers, and cooks all contribute to a programme built around a single, ambitious idea — that art is most powerful when it speaks directly to the senses and to the body. Exhibitions stretch through the entire house, room by room, creating an experience that is as much about atmosphere and sensation as it is about individual works.
A New Sensory Vocabulary
What sets Marres apart from most contemporary art institutions is its sustained commitment to sensory experience. Its programme actively trains the senses, inviting visitors to examine their environment in new ways and to discover connections between art and everyday life that they might never have expected. Research programmes, public events, performances, guided walks through the city and region developed together with artists, and a rich range of publications all extend the conversation well beyond the walls of the house itself.
The garden, vibrant and beautifully maintained, is a destination in its own right — a rare green haven in the dense historic heart of Maastricht. And Marres Kitchen, the much-loved restaurant housed within the building, completes an experience that is as much about pleasure and conviviality as it is about art.
Intimate in scale but international in ambition, Marres is a place where contemporary culture is taken seriously and made genuinely accessible — one of those rare institutions that manages to feel both rooted in its city and open to the entire world.