Showing posts with label Timothy Rub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timothy Rub. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2022

Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

 

Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas

 The Philadelphia Museum of Art

April 11, 2022 - July 31, 2022

Reviewed by Ed Voves

Sean Scully came of age as an artist during the 1970's, just at the moment when painting was proclaimed to be "dead." Minimalism, taking its cue from the work of Ad Reinhardt (1913-1967), discarded narrative content, spiritual meaning and the inner life of art.

"The more stuff in it," Reinhardt had written, "the busier the work of art, the worse it is. 'More is less.'"

How is a young artist, trying to make his or her mark, to contend with such absolutist affirmations? How can painters, in the 1970's or now, express themselves when art is defined by "elders and betters" of the preceding generation? It is an unenviable position, rather like standing on a riverbank, watching as a bridge is burned before you can cross.

A new exhibition, Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, recounts how Scully made it to the opposite shore in a courageous act of artistic self-determination.

Beginning with several galleries devoted to Scully's prodigious skill in printmaking, the retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art charts the course of Scully's five-decades long career, still very much a work in progress. From early Minimalist works to a 2021 painting devoted to the emotional effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, the exhibition shows how Scully has raised Abstract art to new levels of achievement, aesthetic and spiritual.



Sean Scully, Black Blue Window, 2021

It should come as no surprise that Scully devoted a work to the theme of Covid-19. A deeply sensitive and humane man, Scully placed a dark, disturbing form in the center of Black Blue Window. The title identifies it as a window, a portal, but whether it looks onto the land of the living or the dead, is left for the viewer to decide.

The global crisis of Covid-19 directly impinged on the Scully exhibition. Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas was originally was scheduled to open in Philadelphia during 2020, following its debut at the Museum of Modern Art of Fort Worth, Texas. With great determination, Scully, Amada Sroka and Timothy Rub, curators at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, persevered in mounting this splendid display of Abstract art and ideas.



                                       Ed Voves (Photo (2022)                                     
From left, Amada Sroka, Sean Scully & Timothy Rub 

Before proceeding with this review, let us note that Timothy Rub, as well working on the Sean Scully exhibit, guided the Philadelphia Museum of Art through its momentous redesign project. Now serving as Director Emeritus of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Rub is capping-off his long years of inspired leadership with this curatorial triumph.

Struggle and hard-won success are constant themes of Sean Scully's life. He was born in Dublin in 1945, but raised in London during the bleak post-Blitz years. At the press preview, Scully discussed his early life. Scully recounted how he worked in the construction trade as a youth, spending his lunch hour at the Tate Gallery studying the masterpieces in its galleries. 



                                         Ed Voves (Photo (2022)                                      Sean Scully lecturing at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

After many rejections, Scully finally secured a place at the Croyden College of Art in London. He followed his study at Croyden with a fellowship at Harvard University in 1972. This introduction to the American art scene led Scully to move to the U.S. in 1975.

Sculley's early Minimalist work is surveyed in several paintings in the exhibition. I was particularly impressed - and bemused - by Green Light, painted during the period of Scully's fellowship year at Harvard. Scully used tape to map out grid patterns. He then used spray paint to create layered stripes and blocks of color, based upon a limited palate of greens, yellow and black. The result is a hypnotic visual pattern which draws the viewer's gaze to the grid and then locks it down.

According to the canon of Minimalism, the process of viewing a work such as  Green Light is based upon the sensory experience of pure color and pure form. There is no story, much less a moral to the story. "What you see," in the words of Frank Stella, "is what you get."

Perhaps such an interface was Scully's objective back in his younger days. Yet, what struck me immediately about Green Light was how it manifested the sense of alienation felt by so many people during the 1970's. 

Reflecting upon Green Light, I remembered my own shock at reading reviews of B.F. Skinner's Beyond Freedom and Dignity, published in 1971. This was the "big" book of the years when Scully first came to the U.S. Celebrated by some, reviled by others, Beyond Freedom and Dignity asserted that the future of humankind would not be the Age of Aquarius but rather an era of scientific regimentation.



Sean Scully, Green Light, 1972-1973

Green Light strikes me as a jarring visualization of Skinner's world view, of society determined by the workings of a "technology of human behavior" rather than being influenced by "states of mind or feelings."

Was Scully painting Green Light with Skinner's authoritarian theories in mind?There are no indications of a direct or conscious link. Yet, Scully had to be aware of Beyond Freedom and Dignity. He is a well-read man, drawing insights and impressions from all points of the cultural compass. 

I certainly believe that beneath the tape-measured grid and layers of spray paint of Green Light, there are "states of mind or feeling" that could not be repressed by the creed of Minimalism.

For some years after Green Light, Scully continued to devote himself to Minimalist works. The inevitable revolt came in 1981 with Backs and Fronts



Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's Backs and Fronts, 1981

Though a work of Abstract art, Backs and Fronts is based on depths of feeling and social observation. In his comments at the press preview at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Scully said that the painting reflects the hyper-competitive, dog-eat-dog, world of New York City which he witnessed while pursuing his art career.

Backs and Fronts is a monumental work, 8 × 20 feet (243.8 × 609.6 cm). It consists of eleven linen and canvas panels, of different sizes, joined together.

Backs and Fronts was never intended as a painting of stripes about painting stripes. Initially conceived as an homage to Picasso's Three Musicians, Scully's work took on a life of its own until it became a major assertion of art in its time-honored sense, as a bold statement of an artist's views and beliefs.

 


Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Detail of Sean Scully's Backs and Fronts, 1981

The stripes we see in Backs and Fronts confront and clash with each other at every turn. At no point, do we see the slightest hint of conjoined activity, of "socially modified behavior." Robert Hughes noted of Scully's signature stripes that they possessed a feeling that was "something fierce, concrete and obsessive, with a grandeur shaded by awkwardness..."

If Backs and Fronts has a message, was Scully applauding the unrestrained individualism of American society, New York-style, or urging restraint and caution? Looking at his works since this pivotal, breakthrough painting, the act of questioning appears to be far more important to Scully than providing "one-size-fits-all" answers.

Scully has said that he is "very interested in disharmony because I want the painting to be unresolved but not unresolvable. And I want the person looking at it to try and put it together..." 



Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's The Fall (left) and Falling Wrong

"I made a painting called Falling Wrong and someone asked me why and I said, 'Cause falling right only has one possibility... but falling wrong has a thousand options.' "

Pale Fire, 1988, is another work in the exhibition which challenges the imagination of the viewer. It takes its title from Vladimir Nabokov's 1962 novel, a complex story involving scholarly commentary on a 999-line epic poem. The final line of the poem is missing or perhaps never written, as the poet had died mysteriously. It is never clear whether the analytical comments resolve the riddle of the poem or, rather, confuse the issue. 



Sean Scully, Pale Fire, 1988

Scully's Pale Fire reflects the enigma of the novel. The bold, vertical bands of red and white are disrupted by an inset block of narrow black and ochre stripes. These look like the bars on a prison window, keeping the inner meaning of the painting under lock and key. If this is indeed so, Scully reserves the answer for us to decide.

Many of the titles of Scully's paintings may leave viewers wondering as to their meaning. A strong sense of organic life, however, provides the foundation of Scully's art. He visited Morocco early in his career, where he observed traditional forms of craft-making, especially the making of vividly- hued fabrics. This experience enriched his sense of color creation. Later, visits to Mexico and to historic sites like the isle of Iona, birth-site of Christianity in Scotland, further influenced his life and art.

From his visits to Mexico, Scully conceived the idea of carefully conceived and orchestrated blocks of color, "walls of light." These are most impressive, but, to do them justice, you really have to spend time in their presence. 



                                           Ed Voves, Photo (2022)                                      Gallery view of Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas. The works shown are Pink Blue, at left, and the four panels of Land Sea Sky

The color of these works, carefully modulated, radiates from the gallery walls. And in settings like the Dorrance Gallery at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Scully's paintings seem to hover in mid-air, exerting a spiritual presence that is almost palpable.


                                             Ed Voves, Photo (2022)                                              From left, Sean Scully's Between You and Me and Vita Duplex

As noted earlier, Scully often places insets of contrasting color tones, like the block of dark stripes in
Pale Fire, in unusual, unsettling positions on his canvases. These may confound or simply amaze the viewer, as in the blocks of gray-blue, streaked and shadowed with dusky brown, which appear, like specters of a Whistler nocturne, in Vita Duplex, 1994.



Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Detail of Sean Scully's Vita Duplex

Over the last ten years, Scully has created a number of works bearing "Landline" in the title. These are best appreciated as Abtract "landscapes" in the way that depictions of the natural environment affect our mood, emotions and perception of the world around us. Thus, these Landlines are more in the spirit of paintings by J.M.W. Turner than Mark Rothko.



Sean Scully, Landline Pink, 2013

Being a life-long fan of Turner's art, I was much impressed with the Landlines on view in the exhibition. The painting in this series which most appealed to me, however, was more in keeping with the oeuvre of another Romantic-era master, Caspar David Friedrich. I determined to get a photo of Scully as he commented upon this painting, Landline North Blue (2014).

My digital camera had other ideas and try though I might, adjusting the settings, I could not get it to work. The opportunity passed - or seemed to.

Fortunately, Mr. Scully graciously agreed to return to pose before Landline North Blue for one more try after the press preview had concluded. This time, the camera worked and I was able to get a couple quick snaps.

When I got home to look over my pictures, I realized that one of the photos of Sean Scully standing before Landline North Blue was better than I had expected. Indeed, it was better than I could have hoped.



                                       Ed Voves, Photo (2022)                                      Sean Scully posing in front of Landline North Blue

Here is Sean Scully standing before his magnificent painting, his face composed in meditative reflection. His eyes are focused intently, as he ponders how to translate his thoughts into gestured brushstrokes. 

This is how an artist looks, as he shapes his ideas, thus validating the title of this wonderful exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. This is the face that the painting on the easel "sees" as Sean Scully transforms it from a length of canvas or linen into a "wall" of light, resonating with the breath of life and spirit. 

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved                                                                                           

Images courtesy of the  Philadelphia Museum of Art 

Introductory Image: Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's Falling Wrong, 1985. Oil on Linen: 8 × 9 feet (243.8 × 274.3 cm), Collection of the Artist.

Sean Scully (American, born Ireland, 1945) Black Blue Window, 2021. Oil on aluminum: 7 feet 1 inches × 6 feet 3 inches × 2 inches (215.9 × 190.5 × 5.1 cm). Private Lender.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully and the curators of the Sean Scully: the Shape of Ideas exhibition. From left: Amada Sroka, Sean Scully, and Timothy Rub, Director Emeritus of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Gallery view of the Sean Scully: Shape of Ideas exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Sean Scully lecturing at the press preview.

Sean Scully (American, born Ireland, 1945) Green Light, 1972-1973. Acrylic on canvas: 8 feet 1/2 inches × 10 feet 6 3/4 inches (245.1 × 321.9 cm) . Private Collection. 

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's Backs and Fronts, 1981. Oil on linen and canvas: 8 × 20 feet (243.8 × 609.6 cm). Collection of the Artist.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Detail of Sean Scully's Backs and Fronts, 1981. 

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's The Fall, 1983, Oil on canvas: 9 feet 8 inches × 8 feet 5/8 inches × 7 1/2 inches (294.6 × 245.4 × 19.1 cm), and  Falling Wrong, 1985. Oil on Linen: 8 × 9 feet (243.8 × 274.3 cm), Collection of the Artist.

Sean Scully (American, born Ireland, 1945) Pale Fire, 1988. Oil on linen: 8 feet × 12 feet 2 1/2 inches (243.8 × 372.1 cm). Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Gallery view of the Sean Scully: Shape of Ideas exhibiton at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The works shown are Pink Blue, 1985, Oil on Linen over Panel: 32 x 24 inches, Collection of the Artist, and the four panels of Land Sea Sky, 2000, Oil on Linen, 50 x 40 inches (each). Private collection.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully's Between You and Me, 1988, Oil on Linen with Wood: 8 × 10 feet (243.8 × 304.8 cm), Albright Knox Art Gallery, and Vita Duplex, 1993, Oil on Linen: 8 × 10 feet (243.8 × 304.8 cm), Collection of the Artist.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Detail of Sean Scully's Vita Duplex.

Sean Scully (American, born Ireland, 1945) Landline Pink, 2013. Oil on linen: 47 × 42 inches (119.4 × 106.7 cm). Collection of the Artist.

Ed Voves, Photo (2022) Sean Scully posing in front of Landline North Blue, 2014. Oil on Aluminum: 7 feet 1 inches × 6 feet 3 inches (215.9 × 190.5 cm). Forman Family Collection.


Sunday, July 25, 2021

Art Eyewitness Essay: The Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project Triumph

 

The Triumph of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project
A Photo Essay, 2017- 2021 

Original Photos by Anne Lloyd
Commentary by Ed Voves

Old friends in new surroundings. That was the image which almost immediately leapt to mind when my wife, Anne, and I paid our first visit to the newly renovated galleries and public spaces of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. 

The immense redesign and construction project can be traced back to initial planning in the year 2000, with construction commencing in earnest in 2017 and opening to the public just a few weeks ago on May 7, 2021. Anne and I had been honored to attend the March 2017 groundbreaking which I discussed in Frank Gehry's Master Plan for the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Now, four years later, we were back to see how our "old friends" liked their new digs.

By "old friends" I mean the treasures of the Philly Museum's wonderful collection, which have been "reimagined" in the expanded gallery spaces. 

High on the list of familiar and beloved art works is Charles Willson Peale's Staircase Group (Portrait of Raphaele Peale and Titian Ramsey Peale). This nearly life-sized portrait of two of Peale's sons, complete with tromp l'oeil steps, has been placed at the entrance of a newly designed suite of galleries dedicated to telling the story of art in early America. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) The Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Galleries, showing a sofa designed by Benjamin Latrobe (1808). The painting (center) is Washington Allston's Scenes from the Taming of the Shrew (1809)

The "new spaces" include the Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Galleries (American art, 1600's to 1850) and the Daniel W. Dietrich II Galleries for Contemporary Art, especially works with a Philadelphia focus.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) Gallery view of the New Grit: Art & Philly Now exhibition in the Daniel W. Dietrich II Galleries



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2020) Alex Da Corte's S.O.S. (Sam on Sill)

The real "show-stopper" is the Williams Forum, a new public events site of such astonishing design that it was disorienting to take in, the first few times I have visited there.


Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) 
A dramatic view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Williams Forum, with cantilever steps leading down from the first floor.

The redesign of the Philadelphia Museum of Art was designated as the "Core Project" because of the decision to utilize internal space within the imposing  building. Where other museums have "added-on" or "built-out" from their existing structures, the planning committee of the Philly Museum decided to "go deep."



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) 
The Philadelphia Museum of Art's East Entrance & the "Rocky" steps   

As a result of this decision, the familiar "face" of the Philadelphia Museum of Art appears little affected by the momentous changes taking place inside.

"Going deep" was possible because of a complicated series of strategic moves beginning with the acquisition of an Art-Deco style building located near the Philly Museum in 2000. Renamed after generous donors, the Ruth and Raymond G. Perelman Building provided space for staff offices formerly housed in the museum. This now-vacated office space and other areas within the great building would provide room for the Core Project reconstruction without radically altering the distinctive facade of the museum.




Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) 
Cutaway views of the architectural model of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project. The bottom photo shows the Great Stair Hall with Calder Mobile, located above the new Williams Forum.

Maintaining the exterior of the Philadelphia Museum of Art is more than a case of "keeping up appearances". Long before the steps of the museum's East Entrance entered Hollywood legend in the 1970's film Rocky, the Philadelphia Museum of Art occupied a huge place in Philly's cultural identity. Yet, the museum's history is marked by change and coping with adversity.

The Core Project represents the third major transformation experienced by the Philadelphia Museum of Art. 

May 10,1877 was the opening day for the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Its first home was Memorial Hall, one of the buildings of the 1876 Centennial Exposition. Memorial Hall was totally inadequate as an exhibition space by the early years of the twentieth century. The present museum, a magnificent neo-classical structure built with honey-colored limestone, rose on the site of the historic Fairmount Waterworks. The iconic building greeted its first visitors in 1928 and the stage was set for a great future.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018)      
The North pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art,  showing Carl Paul Jennewein's ceramic-glazed terra cotta sculpture entitled Western Civilization, 1932

The next year witnessed the Wall Street debacle followed by the 1930's Depression and World War II. Funding was scarce and the new museum struggled to keep open.

Never-the-less, the Philadelphia Museum of Art endured and thrived. By the turn of the twenty-first century, the collection had grown in quality and quantity to such an extent that many of the galleries were overwhelmed with masterpieces. Clearly a strategy for the Philly Museum was needed, one which would also provide space for the display of contemporary art, especially works by local artists.

In 2004, a long-range Facilities Master Plan was approved. Many dedicated people would play major roles in implementing this Master Plan but four deserve special recognition: Gail Harrity, President of the museum, Anne d’Harnoncourt,  Director and CEO until her passing in 2008, Timothy Rub, Director and CEO since fall 2009, and Frank Gehry, who was selected as architect in 2006.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) Portrait of Frank Gehry

In accepting the challenge of the Core Project, Gehry cogently explained the guiding principle of honoring the vision of the original architect, Horace  Trumbauer and his chief designer, Julian Abele: 

The goal in all of our work at the Philadelphia Museum of Art has been to let the museum guide our hand. The brilliant architects who came before us created a strong and intelligent design that we have tried to respect, and in some cases accentuate. Our overarching goal has been to create spaces for art and for people.

The "strong and intelligent design" of the original architects of the Philadelphia Museum of Art provided 90,000 square feet of internal space for Gehry and his team to "reimagine." Needless to say, an enormous amount of planning, fund-raising and hard work was part of the process.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017)
     The Vaulted Passageway of the Philadelphia Museum of Art,  before renovations in March 2017

Along with the vacated office space mentioned earlier there were two primary areas awaiting redevelopment. The most dramatic was a corridor, 640 feet long, sited on a north-south axis. Even before the construction crews started work, the Vaulted Walkway, as it is known, was a really imposing site. Yet, for almost half a century, it had been closed to the public. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) 
The Van Pelt Auditorium being demolished during the
 Core Project renovations at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Most museum patrons had no idea that the Vaulted Walkway existed. The second major space to be utilized to provide square footage was much more familiar. This was the Van Pelt Auditorium, the site for so many memorable lectures and classic film presentations. But with a replacement planned for the Perlman Center, this much-used locale was demolished to make way for the visionary Williams Forum.



                                  Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021)                                           The Philadelphia Museum of Art's Williams Forum, constructed on the site of the demolished Van Pelt Auditorium

While the construction work proceeded, a second key facet in the success of the Core Project commenced. This was to keep as much of the Philly Museum's collection visible and accessible to patrons during the long years of "pardon our dust" labor.  

The strategic management skills of Timothy Rub, President and CEO of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, solved the problem. A succession of major exhibitions propelled the museum's public service mission as the structural changes of the Core Project gained momentum. Rather than attempt a breathless "recap" of all of the exhibits, a brief discussion of two will suffice. 



Anne Lloyd (Photo 2017) 
Timothy Rub at the opening of the Wild: Michael Nichols exhibition. In the background is a 60-foot composite photo by  Michael Nichols of a 3200-year old Giant Sequoia Redwood tree

The first of these was Wild: Michael Nichols. on view during the summer of 2017. Wild brilliantly juxtaposed images by the noted nature photographer, Michael Nichols, with art works from the Philly Museum's collection. What might have been a superficial "compare-contrast" display yielded many profound  insights into the interaction of human beings and Planet Earth.



                                      Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017)                                                View of the Philadelphia Museum exhibit, Old Masters Now.  Rodin's sculpture Thought (left) is shown with Manet's The Battle of the U.S.S.“Kearsarge” and the C.S.S.“Alabama"

The special exhibition which followed Wild: Michael Nichols in the autumn of 2017 was also worthy of note. Old Masters Now provided a brilliant overview of Philadelphia Museum of Art history by examining the role of one of its principal protagonists. John G. Johnson was a discerning Gilded Age collector. The exhibition reunited many of his greatest acquisitions, by such masters as van Eyck, Rembrandt and Manet, now displayed throughout the museum.

By the late autumn of 2019, The Philadelphia Museum of Art was ready to open the first of the completed "new spaces." The North Entrance provided stylish and easy access to the museum and the Vaulted Walkway reflected the lights of glittering Christmas trees to the delight of happy, impressed patrons.




Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019)
 Views of the renovated North Entrance of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Vaulted Walkway, December 26, 2019

Less than three months later, history repeated itself. Just as the 1929 Wall Street collapse plagued the Philly Museum's early years, so the Covid-19 pandemic and March 2020 "lockdown" created serious problems for the Core Project renovations. 

As the museum construction entered the "home stretch," Timothy Rub kept the massive, $233 million project on target. Delays, of course, were unavoidable. A joint retrospective of Jasper Johns, organized with the Whitney Museum, had to be postponed. But Rub's dynamic leadership got the job done. Fiske Kimbell, the embattled director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 1925-1955, would have approved.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) 
Nuria, 2017, by Jaume Plensa, 
on view in South Hall at the Philadelphia Museum of Art 

Now, walking along the Vaulted Walkway or studying works of art in the new settings of the McNeil and Dietrich galleries, I am filled with amazement and gratitude. Artists and voices from the past, once undervalued, have been accorded an honored place. Young artists from today are receiving what every true artist deserves - an opportunity to contribute to the World of Art.

Oddly enough, for me, the most profound feelings engendered by the Core Project were the result of a chance visit to the Resnick Rotunda. This was one of the areas of the Philadelphia Museum of Art least affected by the redesign. Many of the Philly Museum's world-class Impressionist collection are normally on view in this area of the museum.

During the rehab, the paintings by Monet, Cezanne and van Gogh were displayed in a special exhibition, The Impressionist's Eye, while the Resnick Rotunda and adjoining galleries were refurbished. When Anne and I peaked in, the Resnick Rotunda was empty. 



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019)
 View of the Resnick Rotunda of the Philadelphia Museum of Art 
during the Core Project renovations

I wondered to myself, "what will it be like when people return?"

As the Covid-19 pandemic and quarantine took its toll, this image of the deserted  Resnick Rotunda haunted my mind. Eventually, my "what will it be like, when people return to the museum" question was answered.

It is wonderful.



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021)
 The Resnick Rotunda of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, 
May 28, 2021



Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021)
 Patrons visiting the newly-opened Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Galleries
 The portraits, of Hiram Charles Montier and Elizabeth Brown Montier, are the earliest surviving paintings of an African American couple.
 The portraits were painted by Franklin Street in 1841.

This brings me back to Charles Willson Peale's The Staircase Group. According to another of Peale's sons, Rembrandt, George Washington was totally taken in by the "trick of the eye" when he visited the 1795 exhibition where the painting was first displayed. Glimpsing the "sons" of his friend, Peale, Washington tipped his hat to Raphael and Titian Peale.

That is exactly what I do now, after several visits to the "new" Philadelphia Museum of Art. 

To Gail Harrity, Anne d’Harnoncourt, Frank Gehry, Timothy Rub, to the generous donors who provided the funding for the Core Project and to the curators, designers and construction workers who made it happen ... I tip my hat.

***

Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved. Original photos by Anne Lloyd, all rights reserved.

Introductory Image: Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2021) Charles Willson Peale's The Staircase Group (Portrait of Raphaele Peale and Titian Ramsey Peale), 1795. Oil on canvas: 89 1/2 x 39 3/8 inches (227.3 x 100 cm) Philadelphia Museum of Art. The George Elkins collection, E 1945-1-1

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) The Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Galleries, showing a sofa designed by Benjamin Latrobe (1808). The painting (center) is Washington Allston's Scenes from the Taming of the Shrew (1809)

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) Gallery view of the New Grit: Art & Philly Now exhibition in the Daniel W. Dietrich II Galleries of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2021) Alex Da Corte's S.O.S. (Sam on Sill), 2020. Forman Family Collections.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) A dramatic view of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Williams Forum, with cantilever steps leading down from the first floor.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) The Philadelphia Museum of Art's East Entrance & the "Rocky" steps.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) Cutaway views of the architectural model of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project. 

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) The North pediment of the Philadelphia Museum of Art,  showing Carl Paul Jennewein's ceramic-glazed terra cotta sculpture entitled Western Civilization, 1932.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), Portrait of Frank Gehry at the Opening Ceremony of the Core Project Renovations at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) The Vaulted Passageway of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, before renovations in March 2017

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) The Van Pelt Auditorium being demolished during the Core Project renovations at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) The Philadelphia Museum of Art's Williams Forum, constructed on the site of the demolished Van Pelt Auditorium.

Anne Lloyd (Photo 2017) Timothy Rub at the opening of the Wild: Michael Nichols exhibition. In the background is a 60-foot composite photo by  Michael Nichols of a 3200-year old Giant Sequoia Redwood tree.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017) View of the Philadelphia Museum exhibit, Old Masters Now.  Rodin's sculpture Thought (left) is shown with Manet's The Battle of the U.S.S.“Kearsarge” and the C.S.S.“Alabama"

Anne Lloyd, Photos (2019)  Views of the renovated North Entrance of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Vaulted Walkway, December 26, 2019

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021) Nuria, 2017, by Jaume Plensa, on view in South Hall at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2019)  View of the Resnick Rotunda of the Philadelphia Museum of Art during the Core Project renovations.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2021)  The Resnick Rotunda of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, May 28, 2021.

Anne Lloyd, (Photo 2021) Portrait of Hiram Charles Montier and Portrait of Elizabeth Brown Montier, 1841, by Franklin R. Street. Oil on canvas, 35 x 28 inches. On loan from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. William Pickens, III

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Frank Gehry's Master Plan for the Philadelphia Museum of Art


Frank Gehry and the Core Project Renovations  

at the Phildelphia Museum of Art


Reviewed by Ed Voves

March 30, 2017 was a cold spring morning in Philadelphia. But pure "sunshine" radiated throughout the Philadelphia Museum of Art on that day. An impressive ground breaking ceremony launched the Core Project, the decisive phase of a great renovation effort dating back to 2004. 

My wife, Anne, and I were honored to be invited to the ceremony. A dazzling red carpet marked the path into the rather forbidding Vaulted Walkway on the museum's ground level. Symbolically at least, the light of a new era beamed into this grand museum, home to world-class masterpieces by Thomas Eakins, Paul Cezanne, Vincent van Gogh and the "Rocky" steps!



The Vaulted Passageway of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The ceremonial shovels used to launch the Core Project renovations are at the ready.

It is important to emphasize the word "throughout" in terms of the Philadelphia Museum rehab effort. This massive project is literally an "inside" job.

When the renovation project, known as the 2004 Facilities Master Plan, is completed in 2020, the Philadelphia Museum of Art will be dramatically transformed. The Core Project will reopen and reconfigure huge expanses of space within the honey-colored neoclassical building. These spaces have been blocked-off or under-utilized for many years. 

The renovation of the Philadelphia Museum of Art has been placed in the capable hands of architect Frank Gehry. Famed for his innovative design of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, Gehry also handled an interior-focused renovation of the Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena, California.



At the opening ceremony, Philadelphia's mayor, Jim Kenney (left), sits alongside Frank Gehry (center) and Timothy Rub, director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

In his remarks at the March 30 ceremony, Gehry made the ironic comment that when the Core Project is completed people looking at the museum exterior "won't even know that I've been here."

On the inside, there will be plenty of evidence of Gehry's presence - and expertise.

According to statistics released by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Core Project will open-up  90,000 sq. feet. to the public, of which 23,000 sq. feet will be used for new galleries to display the ever-growing collection of the museum. 

The need for more exhibit space at the Philadelphia Museum of Art has been apparent for a long-time. The 2016 Embracing the Contemporary exhibit illustrated the dilemma of providing sufficient display space for the treasures of the Keith and Katherine Sachs Collection. 

The vast array of Modern art in the exhibit - which Keith and Katherine Sachs have promised to give to the Philadelphia Museum of Art - overflowed the Dorrance Galleries where special exhibits are usually shown. Several galleries in the Modern wing had to re-hung to display the remainder of the Sachs Collection. Iconic works by the "Old Masters of Modern Art" like Modigliani's Blue Eyes (Portrait of Jeanne Hébuterne) had to find temporary homes elsewhere in the museum.



Amedeo Modigliani, Blue Eyes (Portrait of Madame Jeanne Hébuterne), 1917

With a space crunch like this at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Core Project comes not a moment too soon. Much of the newly available gallery space will be devoted to The museum's outstanding collection of Modern and Contemporary art.




The Van Pelt Auditorium under demolition, part of the initial phase of the              Core Project renovation of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.


Artist's rendering of the planned Forum of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The view is looking West, as in the above photo of the demolished Van Pelt Auditorium.

Some familiar landmarks of the old museum have already been demolished as part of the project. We visited the vacated space of the Van Pelt Auditorium, scene of so many great lectures and classic film presentations. The auditorium had been torn down to provide access to the great central space that Gehry's plans will open-up.

This great public space is being styled as the Forum. The title from ancient Rome is well-chosen, even if the Philadelphia Museum is designed like a Greek temple. The Forum will provide better access routes throughout the rather cramped museum. It will also impart a sense of majesty to the interior of the museum to match that of its Greek temple facade.



Artist's view of of the planned Forum as seen from an overlook space.

A spectacular staircase will dominate the Forum, providing access from the renovated Vaulted Walkway - where the groundbreaking ceremony took place - to the exhibit floors. One of these new gallery areas will be designated for a reconfiguration of the museum's American art collection, one of the finest in the world. Of the new gallery space to be made available by the Core Project, 11,500 sq. feet will be dedicated to the display of American art.

What better way to honor the great artists from Philadelphia's past - and future ones too! During the 1876 Centennial Exposition,Thomas Eakins' Gross Clinic was banished to a display of hospital beds and medical equipment at this first world's fair held in the U.S. But now Eakins' masterpiece is going to hang in style in the new American art galleries!


A cutaway view of the model of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project. The Great Stair Hall with Calder Mobile is above the new Forum planned by Frank Gehry.

A fabulous scale model of the Philadelphia Museum of Art with cutaways of the Core Project renovations is currently on display at the museum. It is a work of art in its own right and it will be a pleasure to refer back to this model as construction moves forward.

There will be so much more in the "new" museum, beyond the majestic Forum. New restaurants and shops, state-of-the-art classrooms and a terrific art studio for school groups. There will better access for the physically-challenged and the elderly.

If all goes according to plan, the Core Project will add a total of 169,000 square feet to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

I hope that somewhere in all that bustling, creative space there will be a memorial of some kind to Anne d'Harnoncourt. This great lady was the long-time director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the person who brought Frank Gehry to the museum as the architect of the Facilities Master Plan.



Anne d'Harnoncourt in 1994 
Photo courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art

I frequently saw Ms. d'Harnoncourt at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, though I did not know her personally. I never had the chance to interview her, as I occasionally do Mr.Timothy Rub, the dynamic director of the Philadelphia Museum of Art today. I did not begin reviewing art exhibitions until 2008, the year that Ms. d'Harnoncourt died, tragically, years before her time. The first great exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art that I reviewed was one of the last that she planned, the awesome Frida Kahlo exhibit in 2009.

Anne d'Harnoncourt positively exuded love of art and love for people. You just felt that love whenever you saw her. I still sense her spirit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art and I have the feeling that she will be there at the grand opening ceremony of the Core Project renovations in 2020.

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Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved Images Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art  and Anne Lloyd

Introductory Image: 
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), Portrait of Frank Gehry at the Opening Ceremony of the Core Project Renovations at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), The Vaulted Passageway of the Philadelphia Museum of Art prior to the Opening Ceremony of the Core Project Renovations, March 30, 2017.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), Jim Kenney, Frank Gehry and Timothy Rub the Opening Ceremony of the Core Project Renovations at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.


Amedeo Modigliani, Blue Eyes (Portrait of Madame Jeanne Hébuterne), 1917. Oil on Canvas, 21 1/2 x 16 7/8 inches (54.6 x 42.9 cm). Collection of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, # 1967-30-59.

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), The Van Pelt Auditorium of the Philadelphia Museum of Art under demolition.

Artist's rendering of the planned Forum of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, looking West. Architectural rendering by Gehry Partners, LLP and KX-L. Photo courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art

Artist's view of of the planned Forum as seen from an overlook spaceArchitectural rendering by Gehry Partners, LLP and KX-L. Photo courtesy Philadelphia Museum of Art

Anne Lloyd, Photo (2017), A cutaway view of the model of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's Core Project. 

Anne d'Harnoncourt in 1994Courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art