I love spending time in galleries and going far and wide to see art in cities that I am travelling to. When travelling solo I can be quite heavily planned and pretty much know what exhibition I need to catch in what city, given the sublime experience seeing art can be and given the scarcity of such experiences in India. I'm also of the opinion that it is an activity best done alone as art can have this profound effect on you which gets somewhat diminished (if not ruined) if you over-discuss it, unless it is in highly knowledgeable company or unless ofcourse you both have shown up drunk.
There is something about the subjectivity of art which speaks directly to the kind of person you might be and the kind of life stage you are at. We interpret artworks not as they are, but as we are. That's probably why seeing good art can subconsciously address our deep-seated fears and anxieties and that could explain how we always walk out of museums feeling somewhat lighter. Swiss modern philosopher and author of Essays in Love, Alain de Botton (I'm a fan) goes on to explain in great detail how art can help us with our most intimate and ordinary dilemmas in his book
Art as Therapy - a colossal must read. The currently trendy art blog
Berlin Art Parasites is infact founded on this very philosophy - using art as a means to alter how we live and love. Art not just for art's sake.
Museums and galleries take as much of our time as an otherwise wasted Sunday afternoon but fill it up with sensibilities of a life time. Seeing art is luxury for all and being at a museum paying homage to the arts, the best kind of idol worship.
Given this subjective nature of art, I'm most particularly drawn towards contemporary works even though Impressionist remains by far my favourite artistic period and those works create similar 'impressions' in us. While there is a whole lot of average work in the name of modern art, the reason why we tend to get drawn towards it the most, is the calming feeling that it is the creation of someone like us - with similar joys, sorrows, ecstasies and anxieties of a modern world, the one that we belong to.
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| The calming effects of Monet's Water Lillies at Musee L'Orangerie in Paris |
I have distinct love for art museums that reside in spaces that bring their own unique character to the art viewing experience. The space carrying its own story interacts with the works it houses in very creative ways evoking a range of connections with the audience.
Hence I thought of sending your way a little round up of some of my favourite physical spaces that are home to certain major contemporary works, set in some of the most gorgeous cities of the world. Summer's right here and as you depart on your long vacations, keep some time (and just a few euros) aside to see and marvel at these stunning centres of living, breathing art that double up just as well as datey afternoon cafes, for those who couldn't care less about the art side of things.
1.
Andalusian Centre of Contemporary Arts, Seville
for a lazy sunny garden lunch date
This one is from my recent vacation in the South of Spain and came highly recommended by my Italian painter host. Couldn't possibly have gone wrong. The centre of contemporary art in Seville, set on the other side of the Guadalquivir river is housed in what can be called a wonderland garden. Amidst magical hanging creepers and bougainvillea on steroids, lies a museum inside the Cartuja monastery which once used to be a ceramic factory.
The centre presents an overview of the artistic trends that developed in Spain from the mid-20th century through to the present day and includes pieces by Luis Gordillo, Candida Höfer, Rebecca Horn, Pablo Palazuelo, and Joseph Kosuth amongst others.
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| The magical gardens of CAAC, Sevilla |
The museum is celebrating its 25th year and is curating a stellar exhibit on the role of the artist in a world of economic troubles (See Not, Hear Not, Speak Not is running till Sept'15). With opening works by Curro Golzalez, this exhibit, divided in different galleries analyses the art acquired by the Centre in 25 years within the modern world's economic framework and is a resounding must see.
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As a Backdrop (Immaculada Salinas) Introspective piece on art as backdrop in various scenarios rendered in all pantone shades |
Stepping out of the galleries set apart by vast sunny quiet spaces, you will enter a charming garden cafe where you can muse and bemuse the art you just saw over a cafe long and amidst views of lifesize bougenvilla gates and scents that emanate from endless trees of neroli and oranges. A complete feast of the five senses.
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| Sipping a coffee at the museum garden cafe |
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Bougenvillea facades at the CAAC gardens
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2.
Maxxi, Rome
for a night of martinis and caviar and hanging with Italian actors
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| Entrance, MAXXI Rome |
Designed as a multidisciplinary space by celebrated architect Zaha Hadid and standing tall in its stark modernity against the classical eternal city of Rome, Maxxi is dedicated to innovation in the arts. I went to Maxxi last April and even though the word is that this centre is running into huge losses, there can be no finer example of a gallery where the medium is the message. Navigating through the steel and glass of this brazen structure, you almost become a part of the art on display, making you a central piece in this interactive experience , the protagonist in a novel. I was quite moved by the work of a Dutch architectural firm unStudio which has developed unique 3D architectural concepts, real enough for you to imagine yourself in your future establishment.
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| unStudio's Living Spaces installation |
Or this jaw dropping piece by Emilia Kabakov called
Where is our Place, a lifesize installation that makes you examine the relationship between ancient and contemporary art by the means of humans who are in three different temporal planes viewing art from three different eras.
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| Where is Our Place? (Emilie Kabakov) |
Maxxi is a must visit for perhaps just for the sheer dichotomy it offers from say the Colosseum in Rome. And for some of the best installation art you are likely to see in Italy. And for a hip dinner date at the swish, black and white Maxxi 21 bistro. There is something for everyone here.
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| Towards MAXXI's hip bistro |
3.
Peggy Guggenheim museum, Venice
for a rained-down romantic afternoon
As unreal a city Venice is, taking a boat in the rain to visit someone's private drawing room is enough of an ethereal experience in itself. Located on the Grand Canal, Peggy Guggenheim museum is devoted to modern art, with works ranging from Cubism to Abstract Experessionism. Peggy Guggenheim was an American art collector and socialite with a body of collections on display from New York to Bilbao, who came to live and display her works in Venice in 1949. She was later buried within the gardens of this museum.
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| Peggy Guggenheim Collection at Grand Canal, Venice |
Spending an afternoon at her Venice museum is akin to being invited for a private viewing of works inside her home, such is the intimacy and solitude this space recreates. Walk down rooms and rooms filled with works of celebrated abstract painters like Piet Mondrian (his Composition 11 in Red, Blue and Yellow is on my bedroom wall), Kadinsky and Picasso, lounge on a sofa to ponder a little or play hide and seek with a friend amongst the room walls. You will be at home at Peggy's Venezia museum and a stroll away from a magical gondola ride back into the rest of the city.
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Piet Mondrian at Peggy Guggenheim, Venice
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| View of Grand Canal from the museum |
The museum also houses a relaxing garden cafe set entirely in glass and displaying additional works from her collection. You will be in fine company.
4.
Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris
for an elitist evening champagne and carpaccio
Luxury brands have been historically known to patronise the arts because luxury like art, is handmade and invaluable. So fter the Cartier Centre for Contemporary Art and the PPR museum, it was time for LVMH scion Bernand Arnault to offer his monumental tribute to contemporary arts. Enter Franck Gehry's architectural masterpiece (is it a bird? is it a plane?) and the creation of Foundation Louis Vuitton. This is scale unprecedented.
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| External View - Fondation Louis Vuitton, a stellar structure by architect Frank Gehry |
So what is so cool about this space? Well, its better than better. A 5 level glass and concrete space set over a giant blue grotto. I walked 2 kms in 5 inches to make it to this masterful strcuture in Jardin d'Acclamation in the 16th arr of Paris, only to realise that I would be walking 12 kms more discovering its endless collection of best artworks from popular modern artists. A decade in the making and a budget undisclosed, this is a broken down Sydney Opera House that locks you inside its infinite vastness of space and art, intimate and grand, children's playground and futuristic spaceship.
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| Paris's skyline from Fondation LV's terrace |
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| Glass and concrete over the blue grotto, Fondation LV |
Arnault is a man of boundless influence, and with the Fondation he has managed to bring in what are by far the best works of the most famous influencers of contemporary art in one single opening exhibition (
Les Clefs d'Une Passion, running till Sept'15). There's Edward Munch's The Scream
brushing shoulders with Henri Matisse's The Dance, Kadinsky's Composition VI next to Fernand Léger's Trois Femmes. If you haven't seen any art expos in your life, there cannot be a better place to start and you would have pretty much seen it all by the end of it. For those who have seen it all, the Fondation brings highly original commissioned works by the likes of Ellsworth Kelly (Spectrum VIII in the auditorium) and Olafur Eliasson (Inside the Horizon) whose interactive work with 43 yellow prisms is this ginat structure's selfie-central.
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| Henri Matisse's The Dance (Les Clefs d'Une Passion - Fondation LV) |
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Inside the Horizon ( Olafur Eliasson) - Fondation LV
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On your way out, stop for a champagne (or five) at Le Franck, the gallery restaurant run by a protege of Alain Ducasse and celebrate this glorious coming together of the best of luxury and art in the heart of Paris.
I wish you an arty summer vacation!
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