Thanks to movies and popular fiction (and perhaps the Empire State), New York is one of the most popular places to visit in the US. Not that I’ve run any statistics to check numbers – but the city does show up on everyone’s list of places they’ve been to in the US. I had my own list of must do things when I visited the city last year. Prioritized based on order of excitement, I’m going to focus on the day I visited Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.
I stayed close to the Public Library when I visited New York
and was very sure that I wanted to walk up and not drive to the museum, to
ensure the perfect ‘Guggenheim’ experience. So I walked all the way from 42nd
street on Fifth Avenue to the 88th street, getting more excited with
every block I crossed, giving live telephonic commentary to my sleepy husband,
located in another time zone.
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The 2.5 mile walk from the New York Public Library to Guggenheim Museum on a sunny April day with mild drizzles |
That may sound a bit crazy and far fetched, but you’ll really
need to know a bit about the architect who designed the building – Frank Lloyd
Wright or FLW to know why it was important. A renowned modern architect, it’s
hard to say what made him so popular – stunning modern architectural designs
inspired by nature, sensational personal life choices (he had three wives and
eight children; he even got arrested for running away with another man’s wife) or
inspiration to one of the most controversial and loved authors at the time – Ayn
Rand. FLW was known to come up with building concepts on the fly, just before
meeting clients, because he was already late or had not managed to put
something together within the time agreed with clients. The Guggenheim Museum
is especially unique from that perspective – FLW produced
over 700 sketches and several sets of working drawings over a 13-year span before
finalizing the design for this building.
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Frank Lloyd Wright; Source: https://karsh.org/photographs/frank-lloyd-wright/ |
The Guggenheim Museum was commissioned by Solomon Guggenheim
in 1943, to house his collection of non-objective paintings – some of my
favorites are popularly referenced as Modern and Impressionist art. Non-objective
artworks, paintings and sculptures depict abstract concepts, thoughts or
‘impressions’, rather than real images of people or objects. Given most people
struggle to understand what they depict, here’s my two cents on what makes this
style of art special – You can look at them for days, weeks and years without
getting bored. The ‘abstractness’ or ‘impressionism’, allows each piece of art
to be interpreted in personalized and unique ways depending on the individual looking
at them. My favorite example to depict this is ‘Starry Night’ by Vincent van
Gogh. I have heard several versions of what people thought when they look at
this picture – be it hallucinations of an alcoholic artist, blurry visuals from
a dream, experiments in mixing paints, energy radiations from stars in the sky,
to some sorcery seen on a star-lit night sky!
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The 'Starry Night' by Vincent van Gogh is one of the most iconic and popular paintings from the Impressionist era |
Back to the building now. With post war inflation and the
death of Solomon Guggenheim in 1949, construction of the museum was delayed by about
13 years. Finally completed in 1959, the museum was opened six months after FLW’s
death. An embodiment of Solomon and FLW’s vision on art and architecture,
neither man lived to see the museum opening. Even today, it is hard to say if the
museum is more popular for being an architectural memorial to FLW,
or because it houses art that continue to inspire controversy and debate.
As I walked up to 88th street, the petite white ‘cylindrical’
building looked like an organic structure standing on Fifth Avenue across
Central Park, in complete contrast to the rest of the Manhattan skyline. Satisfied
after looking around from across the street, I walked in to take a tour of the
museum.
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Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum from across Fifth Avenue, New York; © Janani Rajagopalan |
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Walking into Guggenheim Museum; © Janani Rajagopalan |
The interior of the museum opens into a massive glass-roofed
atrium, that is surrounded angular, spiraling walkways that display art.
Standing in the middle of the atrium, you can see people milling around the
walkways, admiring art that is neatly arranged along them.
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View of the atrium and spiralling corridors; © Janani Rajagopalan |
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The spiralling corridors provide slightly tilted surfaces that mirror the aesel of an artist; © Janani Rajagopalan |
Prominent pieces from Solomon’s art collection includes
modern paintings by Marc Chagall, Pablo Picasso, Piet Mondrian and Wassily
Kandinsky. Later in the 1970’s, impressionist paintings by Vincent van Gogh,
Paul Gaugin and Édouard Manet were also introduced. I was lucky enough to see
an original Jackson Pollock, restored and displayed as part of on-going
exhibition.
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Looking at my first ever original van Gogh painting "Mountains At Saint Rémy"; © Janani Rajagopalan |
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Admiring a Mondrian painting "Tableau No. 2/Composition No. VII"; © Janani Rajagopalan |
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The "Alchemy" by Jackson Pollock was one of the most intricately detailed painting I've ever seen. The colors and the way they come together on this painting never stop to amaze |
Right below the atrium, the top-most walkway provides a
lovely view of the Red Lily Pads by Alexander Calder, suspended below the
atrium. Tempted to lean over and click pictures of the atrium, I had security
folks glare and caution me about falling overboard into the atrium.
While warning me for the third time, the lady guard pointed out that she was
more concerned that I might hurt the ‘nice’ people walking below, if I fell
overboard due to my ‘silliness’ while trying to click a picture.
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This shot with the Red Lily Pads turned out just the way I had imagined Guggenheim since I first saw pictures. This was the last click before I decided security might throw me out of the museum; © Janani Rajagopalan |
Content, I wallowed around Central Park for the rest of the
day, waiting to see the sun’s last rays on the museum building. Though I didn’t
manage any evening pictures thanks to a wet camera, that day was probably the
happiest day I spent travelling in the US
J
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