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The cement was cold
and wet. I looked down at my feet and anguished at the sight of my jeans
soaking up all that water. A breeze blew by me, lifting my hair in the
cold air as I shivered. I looked up at the old building and noticed
the moss growing over the grey cemented facade between each crevice,
desperately filling up all the cracks. The letters, clinging onto the
building for dear life, like the last golden leaf of a plant in the
autumn season, read "The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum." I sighed at
the sight which beheld me. Museums, I thought, never looked like this.
As I entered the swiveling doors, I wondered what I was in for.
Unlike the Metropolitan Museum, with its ancient Greek temple-like appearance,
the outside of the Guggenheim boasts a poor comparison. Where once it
was the acclaimed, innovative, concrete structure of designer Frank
Lloyd Wright, now it is nothing more than the scaffolding projects of
the Paratus Group, necessary for the up-keeping of the famous building.
Designed in 1943, the structure of the museum embodied nature and architecture
into one fantastic plasma, reminiscent of its proximity to Central Park.
Much like a nautilus shell, the museum begins at the top, and spirals
downward, with continuous spaces flowing freely into each other. At
the apex cleverly lies a window to the outside world, shedding light
into the mysterious world before me, displayed as art and architecture,
and everything in between. Thought some critics have argued that the
complexity of Wright's structure has taken away from the pieces that
are inside, for me, and for people alike, this has only served to enhance
the beauty therein. Everything about the environment of the Guggenheim
is geometric in shape and uninterrupted in form. The ceiling with its
triangular lights contrasts with the undulating floor that twists and
turns so effortlessly, that it is no wonder Wright's architecture is
a symphony all its own. Though at times I was dizzied by the rotation
of the building and the uneven flooring, I marveled as each bend revealed
yet another piece of art, one as powerful and overwhelming as the place
in which it was housed.
Perhaps the most inspiring part about the building itself was the view
from the highest rotunda: a tunneling labyrinth from the focal point
at the top, to the focus of the people at the bottom. Today, the exterior
of the Guggenheim is in dire need of restoration. Of the twelve layers
of paint plastered over the forty-six years of the building's existence,
only the concrete surface remains. Monitoring of the cracking that has
plagued the building since its opening in 1959, as well as laser survey
technologies, will help to restore the museum to its original eloquence.
Most recently, the interior of the Guggenheim has been filled with Zaha
Hadid's work. Born in Baghdad in 1950, Hadid studied in Switzerland,
England, and Lebanon before she pursued architectural studies in 1972.
Her style, which began as a structured and rigid form, has now given
way to more fluid and undulating shapes, complementing the interior
of the Guggenheim itself. Her pieces, which are displayed in chronological
order - the most recent being at the top of the rotunda - evidence this
gradual change. Nevertheless, it was Hadid's rigidity that gave her
fame as an architect. Fields, folds, ribbons, and clusters are some
aspects of her contemporary practice. For several years, Hadid turned
to painting to express this form, as seen in Vitra Fire Station
and Victoria City Aerial, Berlin. But her primary interest lay
in the insertion of "social condensers" into architecture. She wished
to integrate public space in the dispersed 20th century to increase
social contact, by creating spaces whose functions were undefined. Nowhere
is this more evident than in my favorite architectural design, the Bergiesel
Ski Jump, located in Innsbruck, Austria. The goal of this piece, which
was completed in 2002, was to introduce a totally alien element into
a given formula, Bergiesel Mountain. Much like the Guggenheim building,
the ski jump represents a functional design that is smoothly articulated
and fused into an organic unity. It seems appropriate to me that the
two pieces of architecture that I found most interesting boasted the
same characteristics: math and nature. At fifty meters tall and ninety
meters long, the Bergiesel Ski Jump is as big a landmark in Austria,
as the Guggenheim is in New York.
Making my way towards one of the extensions added onto the Guggenheim
when more space was needed, I entered what was called the Thannhauser
collection. Great, I thought, another modern representation of architecture,
only this time with some funky name. But to my surprise, what I came
upon was something other than architecture; something different than
modem. The room was filled with what seemed like oil-on-canvas paintings
surrounded by gold scalloped frames. I stumbled my way towards the one
painting that caught my eye, and frankly, most everybody's eyes around
me. L'Hermitage at Pontoise, as it was named, was a painting
created in 1867 by Camille Pissarro. Born in the Caribbean in 1830,
Pissaro was sent to Paris to become schooled, where a director noticed
his interest in art. Urging him to take advantage of his skills, as
well as his environment, he sent Pissaro home to paint coconut trees.
What is so significant about Pissaro's paintings, which also manifests
itself into L 'Hermitage, is the shadowing that he allows his
paintings to consume. Originally guided by the way scenes and objects
were imprinted in his mind, Pissaro made every aspect that he recorded
onto his painting as faithful as possible. He perceived light as an
inseparable entity from the things it illuminated. Thus, whether he
painted with delicate or bold strokes of light, one could always distinguish
his paintings from others'. Stunned at this revelation, I realized I
had been looking at the painting for a long time. Perhaps it was the
sense of sight that drew me to his craft, or the mere realm of emotion
he had created. Whatever it was, I walked away thinking of the small
houses and dirt road, shadowed by the overgrown trees, and how much
they reminded me of towns in Greece. I walked away unable to find a
piece as compelling as that of Pissaro's.
The idea of a museum trip on my day off from school made me shiver.
I shunned the idea in my head, as well as on the way to the museum itself,
as I thought of it ruining my day. How stupid, I thought, to be trapped
in a place where only art can entertain you! I looked at my watch and
felt the ticking of the minute hand struggle to pass the hour. I sighed.
If only I had known what I was in for; if only I had known what the
Guggenheim would mean to me; and if only I had known what would become
of me as I entered through those swiveling doors.

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