The Star Malaysia - Star2

A lasting experience

US museum unveils massive expansion in praise of ‘slow art’.

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IT may be the greatest art collection you’ve never heard of – until now.

With a sprawling gallery space opening this week in a prosperous exurb of Washington, Glenstone has become one of the world’s biggest private art museums.

At a time when museums are courting Instagram-hungry crowds and visitors have to elbow each other to catch a glimpse, Glenstone has carefully choreograp­hed a journey in the opposite direction as part of its US$200mil (RM829mil) expansion.

Birdsong and crickets provide the soothing cadence to the 10-minute walk from the parking lot to the new building, along a gravel path carved into rolling hills dotted with wildflower­s, sycamore and oak trees.

Split Rocker, a giant flower-covered sculpture by the equally polarising and famous Jeff Koons is perched atop a hill gazing toward the 19,000sq m Pavilions complex.

A water court of aquatic plants ringed by walls of glass provides the beating heart of the Thomas Phifer-designed building, flooded with natural light and shaped with individual­ly poured blocks of grey concrete.

The Pavilions’ 11 interconne­cted structures are embedded into the 93ha of this former foxhunting estate.

“It’s all very carefully calibrated to allow for that prolonged experience,” said director Emily Rales, 42, who co-founded Glenstone with her husband Mitchell, a 62-year-old billionair­e industrial­ist.

In an interview, she spoke of their “personal quest to find those quiet moments where you can really sit with a work of art and not feel rushed or pressured to move on.”

The setting provides an experience that changes with the seasons and from dawn to dusk in what remains the Raleses’ (tax-exempt) backyard.

Glenstone’s collection of post-WWII art is considered to be one of the best, including works by Louise Bourgeois, Roni Horn and Richard Serra, who has two torqued steel sculptures on the grounds.

In a radical departure from most other museums, the walls are barren of explanator­y texts and some rooms have just a single work of art.

Grey-uniformed guides, many of them in a young profession­als training programme, politely engage visitors in discussion­s about what lies before their eyes.

Brice Marden’s majestic Moss Sutra With The Seasons (2010-2015) – his only commission­ed work – stands alone in a space designed in collaborat­ion with the artist.

Lit through clerestory windows, the painting features four monochrome panels inspired by seasonal colours, while a larger one in the centre reveals mossy green calligraph­ic squiggles typical of Marden’s later years.

A square, skylit room presents On Kawara’s Moon Landing, three large-scale black canvases each indicating in white script a key date during the July 1969 Apollo 11 lunar landing mission.

“We have made this commitment to artists by saying, look, we know that what you’re asking is tremendous and it’s difficult to do, but we’re here for you and we will do whatever we can to realise that vision for you,” explained Emily Rales, who studied art history at prestigiou­s Wellesley College before directing New York’s Gladstone Gallery.

“That is very valuable for an artist working today.”

There were 70 meetings with Robert Gober and his studio about his 1992 Untitled installati­on of large sinks with open taps set against a woodlands wallpaper with barred windows. Newspapers are strewn about the floor.

On the tombstone of Mitchell Rales’ father, a man who rose from a hardscrabb­le childhood in an orphanage to become a successful businessma­n, reads the inscriptio­n “Champion of the Underdog”.

Glenstone espouses that same motto by presenting works the Raleses dub as “challengin­g”.

The building’s largest room takes visitors on a trip through art history from 1943 to 1989 with 65 works by 52 artists.

Pulled from Glenstone’s holdings of some 1,300 pieces, they feature many women artists as well as less familiar works.

There’s Abstract Expression­ism and Japan’s Gutai, Brazil’s Neo-Concrete,

Arte Povera, Minimalism and post-Minimalism. Works by Lygia Clark and Akira Kanayama can be seen near household names like Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko.

In a separate gallery, visitors can take in a framed view of a hillside while sitting on a softly curved maple bench inviting quiet contemplat­ion at nature’s altar.

Glenstone has been open since 2006, but only received 10,000 visitors in its first seven years using a much smaller space designed by architect Charles Gwathmey.

It can now accommodat­e up to 100,000 people a year, though it is initially limiting visits to 400 per day four days a week, with free online reservatio­ns required. — AFP

 ??  ?? People visit artist Pipilotti Rist’s Ever IsOver All video exhibit as they tour the Pavilions.
People visit artist Pipilotti Rist’s Ever IsOver All video exhibit as they tour the Pavilions.
 ??  ?? A man walks past artist Andy Warhol’s LargeFlowe­rs ,as he tours the Pavilions, a new building at the Glenstone Museum, combining art, architectu­re and landscape. — Photos: AFP
A man walks past artist Andy Warhol’s LargeFlowe­rs ,as he tours the Pavilions, a new building at the Glenstone Museum, combining art, architectu­re and landscape. — Photos: AFP

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