Showing posts with label Frank Gehry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Gehry. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Geek Gone Mad!

If your pockets were as deep as those of Paul Allen's, the co-founder of Microsoft, you wouldn't have to go to the toy store to purchase your action figures.  You simply could buy them from the movie productions, like Mars Attacks!, that spawned them.

 

You also could commission Frank Gehry to design a building to house your collection. Seattle's Museum of Pop Art, aka MPoP, recalls his much more elegant Guggenheim in Bilbao and Disney Hall in Los Angeles.


It may have looked more appealing in model form.  Especially if you'd smoked a little weed.


Fortunately, the museum works better inside.




I'll say one thing for the collection:  it's electic, at least from a baby boomer's perspective like mine.  If Allen had lived--he died five years ago--we would be the same age.  Who among our generation doesn't remember was watching The Wizard of Oz when it appeared annually on television?



But my taste eventually took the Camp fork in the pop culture road.  His veered more toward science fiction, fantasy and horror which may explain why the museum didn't engage me as much as I hoped.  

Our tastes intersected with Lost In Space, adapted from Swiss Family Robinson, my favorite Disney movie as a kid but seeing the costume that Billy Mumy wore isn't nearly as much fun as watching the five-minute promo CBS showed its affiliates before the show premiered in 1965.  The show itself took place in 1997!


A few items interested me for reasons unrelated to their display.  Thom and I stumbled upon the location where Planet of the Apes was filmed last summer on our trip to LA.


I've never read a Harry Potter book or seen one of the movies but I can assure you that Daniel Radcliffe totally deserved his Tony for Merrily We Roll Along.


And I just like how these bat bombs from Batman Forever photographed.


Allen conceived the place as the Experience Music Project in homage to Jimi Hendrix. Its opening in 2000 put Seattle on my list of cities to revisit.


You can watch clips of Hendrix performing in the auditorium.



Hendrix played this Fender Stratocaster at Woodstock.  Some of the kinder architecture critics suggested its shape inspired Gehry's design for the Experience Music Project.


You'll find one of Prince's guitars, too.


In fact, there's a guitar tower, easily the most memorable thing about the museum.


Nirvana fans may disagree.  While Kurt Cobain's signature look is on view in the main gallery, there's an entire room devoted to the band.  I was always more glam than grunge



. . . although Hole's Live Through This, one of my favorite albums of the '90s, did inspire to me to make this t-shirt.


Maybe that's why I enjoyed this shirt that Kurt designed and the suitcase he carried more than anything else on view.



But IMHO, the rest of the museum is poorly curated.  It wasn't clear from the label if either Cardi B or Billie Eilish carried this protest sign.


And this display--ostensibly to demonstrate how different phases in pop culture, from Woodstock to K-Pop aren't so different--missed a real opportunity to show how significantly technology--and streaming in particular--has changed the consumption of music.  

During my long road trip drives, I listened to my favorite songs of each of the last eight years in reverse chronological order.  Single songs, often by artists who don't sustain careers, dominate in recent years but back in 2016, before I became familiar with the "New Music Daily" playlist on Apple, album cuts were king.  Whether this is good or bad is hard to parse, but it does reflect the further fracturing of the monoculture that once provided Americans with a common playground.



Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Walt Meets Frank

Frank Gehry designed the Walt Disney Concert Hall.  It opened in 2003, just a couple of years after my last visit to Los Angeles.  Subtle branding doesn't get much better than this.


A small park behind the hall is great place for DTLA workers or tourists to hang in the shade.


There's an unusual fountain, too.



Thom couldn't understand my obsession with taking pictures of the building from every angle but its size, reflective surfaces and shadows make photography challenging, especially on a sunny day.


Gehry wasn't the obvious "starchitect" choice but his design, considerably facilitated by computer technology,  charmed Walt's widow.  The Disney family and company ended up paying 60% of its $274 million cost.  Private donations covered the rest.


We couldn't get tickets for a concert while we were there, but we did catch a glimpse of what appeared to be a children's orchestra rehearsal.  Critics have good things to say about the acoustics.  No-longer wunderkind Gustavo Duhamel, who has been conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic at its home since 2009, will soon find out if the prestige of leading the New York Philharmonic can compensate for the iffy acoustics of David Geffen Hall.


Duhamel will be around in October to celebrate the building's 20th anniversary in October with Gehry, who is 94.  The program also includes Esa-Pekka Salomen, the LA Phil's Conductor Laureate (check out their superb recording of Bernard Hermann's film scores) , Herbie Hancock and H.E.R.  Book now!



I think it's safe to safe that Disney Hall anchored DTLA's redevelopment.


Gehry designed the Grand, too, where Disney Hall looms above the pool deck on the tan roof.  But millionaire renters beware:  only ghosts populate the 'hood after the worker bees go home. It's funny how a "family" exhibit of Jean-Michel Basquiat's work is practically across the street from the curated Keith Haring retrospective at the Broad.  West Coast proximity, even in death, and a far cry from the scuzzy East Village where both artists lived, loved and died more than 30 years ago.


As much as I admire the Gehry's work--we to Bilbao just to see the satellite he designed for the Guggenheim Museum in Spain--neither building made as big an impression as the Sydney Opera House, an obvious influence on both.  That may have as much to do with its spectacular harbor setting as Jørn Utzon's breathtaking design, with no help from a computer.




Of course sailboats are much more graceful than cars, although LA traffic does add some welcome color to the setting. Would you believe the parking garage ate up nearly half the budget?



Afterward, we had cocktails on the roof of the United Artists Theater that Steve, our Art Deco guide, had recommended.  It's now an Ace hotel.  Sunglasses definitely required, even if you're not a hipster.


That's my merch bag from the Broad, where I bought a Keith Haring t-shirt, next to a watermelon margarita which looks better than it tasted.


We had an hour to kill before Thom treated me to a dinner at Bavel, a packed restaurant in the Arts District, which borders Skid Row!  His Terani Couture colleagues had taken him to eat there his first night in LA.


The small-plate food was so delicious that I forgot to photograph our shared entree, Wagyu oxtail tagine.

Yellowtail Crudo
Hawaii Cauliflower + Dipping Sauce
Salted Cashew & Chocolate Stracciatella Ice Cream Bomb

 Travel days don't get much better than this one.  Thanks, Thom, for dinner and the excuse to fly to LA!


Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Skin Deep Beauty at the Guggenheim Bilbao

We flew to Bilbao on Vueling, a cut-rate European airline. Business men and women crowded the cramped flight.  Bilbao is the capital of Biscay--Basque country--one of Spain's most prosperous regions.


The City fathers sure knew what they were doing when they persuaded the Guggenheim to open an annex in a small town that that didn't appear on many tourist itineraries before 1997.  Even better, the Guggenheim got Frank Gehry to design it. We examined his tinny sensation from every angle.  I'll bet it looks more gold when the sun is shining.




 




The best art is displayed outside.  Like this spider by Louise Bourgeois.  My friend Anthony printed some textiles for her before she died several years ago.



It's hard to resist Jeff Koons, especially if you're under the age of 12.



As part of one permanent installation, fog envelops the bottom portion of the building on a regular schedule.


The audioguides breathlessly whispered a lot of claptrap.


As for most of the art inside?  Meh.


A guard reprimanded me for taking this picture of a "work" by Antoni Tapies.  Perhaps the museum fears no one would come to see the exhibit if they realized it consisted largely of pieces like this.  I'm sure it's comfortable, though!


Wandering through Richard Serra's mammoth plates of spiraled steel was fun.


 
No touching the sides!



Art appreciation is exhausting.


Would you want the Guggenheim Bilbao as the backdrop for your wedding photos? This bride is just asking to be upstaged!


Thom, Chris and I used the cute little tram to take in some of the City's other sights while Dan enjoyed a massage and pedicure back at the Hotel Melia.


We walked across the Zubizuri, a pedestrian foot bridge designed by Santiago Calatrava.


I failed to make the connection between the Zubizuri and the Milwaukee Art Museum which had so impressed me nearly a decade earlier.  Calatrava also designed the Oculus in New York City.


Thom is crazy about Iberian jamon.



We shopped for road maps at El Corte Ingles, Spain's largest department store.  I still have a beach towel I purchased there on my first visit to Spain, in 1994.