home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=91TT2347>
- <title>
- Oct. 21, 1991: A Grand New Getty
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 21, 1991 Sex, Lies & Politics
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DESIGN, Page 100
- A Grand New Getty
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Architect Richard Meier's model for a sprawling art center shows
- there's lots of verve left in American modernism
- </p>
- <p>By Kurt Andersen--Reported by Daniel S. Levy/New York
- </p>
- <p> American architecture has spent the past few years in the
- dumps, fretful and feckless. Aesthetically, there is neither
- invigorating ferment nor much consensus, and the collapse of
- both the housing and commercial real estate markets means that
- even big-name architects have precious little to do right now.
- So when Richard Meier's final designs for the J. Paul Getty
- Trust's vast art center, a $360 million, six-building
- museum-and-art-scholarship wonderland, were unveiled in Los
- Angeles last week, it wasn't just his envious peers who paid
- attention. Meier won the commission over 32 fellow architectural
- stars (including Charles Moore, Frank Gehry and Robert Venturi)
- back in 1984, and given the prominence of the project and the
- deep-pocket client, every year the architect spent tweaking his
- design only raised the stakes higher. "Architecture," said Meier
- on the eve of the debut of the most important work of his
- career, "takes a long time."
- </p>
- <p> The Getty Center has been called the commission of the
- century, and for once that may not be hyperbole. The project
- includes a sprawling museum containing everything from an 18th
- century French corner cupboard made for the head of the Polish
- army to Van Gogh's Irises; a spacious, circular loft building,
- where art scholars can think and write, mingle and argue; a
- separate building devoted to harnessing computers on behalf of
- art-historical truth; an auditorium; a restaurant; and a huge
- state-of-the-art facility for conservators. All this will be set
- amid gardens and fountains on a positively Olympian site--110
- acres abutting the Brentwood neighborhood, on a hill just half
- a mile north of Sunset Boulevard--with panoramas to die for.
- "You can see downtown, you can see UCLA, Century City, Santa
- Monica and the ocean," says Meier, who has lived half the time
- in a house on the site since 1986.
- </p>
- <p> The project's scale, ambition and high-mindedness--portentousness even--are a throwback to a time when the
- cultural mission was clear, thinking was big, and budgets were
- gigantic. But then Meier, 57, is rather gloriously anachronistic--and high-minded and portentous--himself. While most of his
- peers have spent the past two decades feverishly inventing (or
- capitulating to) a sometimes gimcrack neo-neoclassicism, Meier
- has remained an unrepentant circa-1927 Corbusian--modernism's
- last best heir. "I don't think you change your values every day
- or every time you do a new building," he says. "If you are
- worried about style or what is the trend of the moment, you are
- in trouble."
- </p>
- <p> Meier's architecture is cool and impeccable, deluxe
- abstract collages of interlocking white-metal-clad boxes and
- curved white-metal-clad walls, with nothing but dark punched
- windows and steel stair rails for exterior ornament. It is
- architecture for the 21st century as imagined in the early 20th
- century. There are no diversionary pediments and keystones, only
- suave geometries and rigorous details. His best-known work has
- been relatively small-scale zillionaires' villas and a few
- museums.
- </p>
- <p> Happily, although the Getty complex will contain as much
- floor space as a skyscraper, Meier has scattered its nearly 1
- million sq. ft. among six sharply distinct buildings, none
- taller than five stories. The largest is the museum, which is,
- in turn, broken up into five pavilions set around a 1 1/2-acre
- garden courtyard, interconnected by walkways, some open air. The
- arrangement means that a visitor's tour will be punctuated by
- blasts of California blue sky and sunlight: Rembrandt and
- Ruisdael landscapes interspersed with real-life Pacific vistas.
- </p>
- <p> The one part of the Getty that diverges somewhat from
- Meier's earlier work is the Center for the History of Art and
- the Humanities, the intellectual core of the enterprise. Frank
- Lloyd Wright is one of the gods from whom Meier claims stylistic
- influence, and the basic form of this building--a five-story
- cylinder whose salient interior feature is a broad ramp that
- follows the building's curve as it descends--suggests Wright's
- Guggenheim Museum with the sides straightened and one large
- slice of the layer cake removed.
- </p>
- <p> Overall, the stucco and cleft-cut stone will give the
- Getty a nice grittiness lacking in Meier's previous work.
- Instead of the usual aloof Meieresque facades, the buildings are
- full of verve; they are even a bit manic. Instead of sleek
- uninterrupted planes of metal and glass, there are balconies,
- loggias and shady brise-soleils. If the new Getty becomes a
- lively, civilized place, it will be because, for all the
- white-on-white elegance, it is not pristine and hermetic, not
- another gorgeous monolith. The rugged terrain and Meier's good
- planning sense have dictated a dense urban messiness, with odd
- angles and almost ungainly juxtapositions, rather than some
- prissy classical grid over which buildings as jewels are
- dispersed just so.
- </p>
- <p> Construction begins on the main complex next spring, and
- Meier, whose architecture depends on precision detailing, will
- have to be especially vigilant about the quality of the
- Southern California craft: Taco Bell stuccowork won't do. But
- considering the budget and Meier's habitual perfectionism, it
- looks as if the Getty Center, when finished in 1996, will have
- justified all the fuss.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-