Sunday, November 25, 2012

November in the Windy City

Self Portrait: 7 AM Election Day 11/6/2012 The Windy City

My recent trip was to Chicago in early November. I attended another Road Scholar trip with a focus on the new Modern Wing of the Art Institute and Millennium Park which is adjacent to it across Monroe Street. So, just to orient you below, in the lower left quadrant of the picture is the Art Institute Complex. And the lower right quadrant is Millennium Park with the pedestrian bridge across Monroe Street that connects them. (Hopefully this will make sense as you look at the pictures)


The main entrance to the Art Institute on Michigan Avenue.
The lions at the entrance are forever synonymous with the Art Institute.
The pedestrian bridge from the New Wing into Millennium Park.
The Modern Wing of the Art Institute from The Lurie Garden in Millennium Park.
Great hall of the Modern Wing.

Millennium Park is wrapped into your visual experience inside and outside of the Modern Wing. It is always present as you experience the new wing. 



And now, on to the Park itself.

First stop is "Cloud Gate".

110 Ton Stainless Steel Sculpture

Better know as "The Bean"

 Created by British Sculptor Anish Kapoor

The arch is 12 feet high, providing the walkway underneath the Bean.


Looking toward the Crown Fountain from the pedestrian footbridge.

The Crown Fountain, inspired by the people of Chicago whose faces appear on the LED display on the 50 foot tall glass block towers. In better weather, water cascades from the towers creating a pool for play and reflection. The day of my visit it was rainwater at the base of the tower.


Looking toward the Pritzker Pavilion and the signature Frank Gehry outdoor concert venue from the pedestrian footbridge.


The pavilion is 120 feet high with a "headdress" of brushed stainless steel ribbons.The concert venue seats 4000 in fixed seats and can accommodate another 7,000 on the Great Lawn. 


The trellis of crisscrossing steel pipes supports the sound system and is said to create a sound akin to an indoor concert hall.


And by way of contrast, I stopped for a walk on the beach before taking the train into Chicago...a few quiet moments before the Big City.




Thanks for looking!












Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving 2012

A DAY TO BE GRATEFUL
Thanksgiving Day 2010 Muskatatuck Wildlife Refuge, Southern Indiana

Safe Travels, Good Company and  
Thanks for Friends and Family.

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Architectural Gems: Part 2

 Milwaukee Art Museum and Ten Chimneys

Part 2 of my Wisconsin travels includes our day trip to the Milwaukee Art Museum and, the next day, a trip to Genesee Depot and Ten Chimneys, the estate of American theater icons Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.

First the Milwaukee Art Museum: In 1994 the Milwaukee Art Museum commissioned Spanish born architect, sculptor, engineer and bridge builder, Santiago Calatrava to build an new entrance and a new identity for their museum. The building was opened to the public in 2001. It sets on the shore of Lake Michigan and houses an atrium with views of the lake.



In 1957 the original museum space was designed by architect Eero Saarinen and in 1975 the building was enlarged with the jutting slab structure that extends out toward Lake Michigan.
Calatrava conceived of a glass and steel atrium/reception hall that would be shaded by a moveable sunscreen. The sunscreen is formed by 2 wings.
The Reiman Bridge, a suspended pedestrian walkway links the downtown to the waterfront. It is also the place to be at noon every day for the demonstration of the "wings" opening and closing. I hope the pictures below will give you a sense of the drama and power of the design.








And now a look at the inside the Museum.


Definitely in the spirit of the great builders of the Gothic Cathedrals of Europe...daring and testing the limits.










It has been said about  Santiago Calatrava "He combines light and air and structural elegance with strength"


and the design even extends to the parking garage!


Next, a complete change of pace: architecture of a completely different scale and purpose. We go from public architecture to residential architecture at Ten Chimneys.



The number of chimneys on all the combined buildings on the is (you guessed it) ten! Hence, Ten Chimneys. Above is the main house and home of Alfred and Lynn.


Katharine Hepburn said "Every time I was visiting with the Lunts in Genesee Depot, I was in a sort of daze of wonder, the dining room, the table, the china, the silver, the food, the extraordinary care and beauty and taste...a sort of dream, a vision."
The estate included a greenhouse, bath house and pool, and a separate residence known as "the hen house" where Alfred's Mother and sister resided. Pictured above is the bath house and behind it, "the hen house".
Picture Noel Coward, Helen Hayes, Katherine Hepburn (to name a few) lounging around the pool.
Thanks for sharing my trip with me. Next stop is Chicago and the Art Institute in November.