CIRCUS CIRCUS.WHILE THE LAS VEGAS STRIP is home to a facsimile of Manhattan, a faux Paris, and an ersatz Venice, the avenue's newest addition, believe it or not, will be a real museum: the latest branch of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Meyer Guggenheim, 1828–1905, b. Aargau canton, Switzerland, emigrated (1847) to the United States, prospered as a retail merchant in Philadelphia, and in time built up a flourishing business importing Swiss embroidery. When nearly 60 he purchased from friends some Colorado mining property. Sensing that sure profits were in processing rather than in mining, he built large smelters in Colorado and Mexico and a refinery at Perth Amboy, N.J.. Even stranger, in a second venture at the same site, the Guggenheim is partnering with the venerable State Hermitage Hermitage, cottage, near Montmorency, FranceHermitage, in France: see Montmorency, France.Hermitage, museum, St. Petersburg, RussiaHermitage (ĕr'mētäzh`), museum in St. Petersburg, Russia, one of the world's foremost houses of art. Museum in Saint PetersburgSaint Petersburg, city, RussiaSaint Petersburg, formerly Leningrad, Rus. Sankt-Peterburg, city (1990 est. pop. 5,036,000), capital of the Leningrad region (although not administratively part of it) and the administrative center of the Northwest district, NW European Russia, at the head of the Gulf of Finland on both banks of the Neva River and on the islands of its delta. St., Russia, to bring the likes of Cezanne, Picasso, and Kandinsky to the land of Wayne Newton, drive-through wedding chapels, and Elvis impersonators. "Although I could have scarcely imagined working in Las Vegas even one year ago--my first visit to the city took place only at the beginning of this year--the fascination of the place is undeniable," explains Thomas Krens, the Guggenheim's director, who cites Robert Venturi's classic architectural panegyric Learning from Las Vegas as partial inspiration for the locale.The Hermitage-Guggenheim Museum Guggenheim Museum, officially Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, major museum of modern art in New York City. Founded in 1939 as the Museum of Non-objective Art, the Guggenheim is known for its remarkable circular building (1959) designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. It holds major exhibitions of the works of contemporary artists. Its permanent collection includes, among many modern works, numerous pieces by Brancusi and Kandinsky. (in an effort to keep the partnership fair and square, half the signs there read "Guggenheim-Hermitage") is set to open this spring inside the 3,000-room Venetian Resort-Hotel-Casino. The space is designed by none other than Rem Koolhaas, the Pritzker Prize Pritzker Prize (prĭt`skər), officially The Pritzker Architecture Prize, award for excellence in architecture, given annually since 1979. Largely modeled on the Nobel Prize, it is the premier architectural award in the United States and is named for the family that sponsors the Chicago-based Hyatt Foundation.--winning Dutch architect and Harvard professor who famously espouses the breaking down of barriers between high and low culture. (Other recent commissions include a concert hall in Portugal and Prada boutiques in San Francisco, New York, and Beverly Hills.) Koolhaas's design for the museum's intimate exhibition spaces demands a mere 7,660 square feet from the Venetian. Walls of Cor-Ten steel--Richard Serra's medium of choice--provide a witty reference to both a postindustrialist aesthetic and the rich hues of the Hermitage's home galleries. The museum will open with "Masterpieces from the Hermitage and Guggenheim Collections," which promises forty works from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries by Monet, Pissar ro, Chagall, Modigliani, and Picabia, among others. One hopes that visitors to the land of illusion will understand that these babies are the real thing. This summer, the second Koolhaas-designed space will open in the Venetian's complex: The Guggenheim Las Vegas, a 63,700-square-foot behemoth reminiscent of an airplane hangar, will feature open, airy galleries, seventy-foot ceilings, and a giant, six-story door wide enough to accommodate an eighteen-wheeler. Details include a "media wall" on which images will be projected and vast mechanical ceiling panels that, rumor has it, may be imprinted with reproductions of Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel Sistine Chapel (sĭs`tēn) [for Sixtus IV], private chapel of the popes in Rome, one of the principal glories of the Vatican. Built (1473) under Pope Sixtus IV, it is famous for its decorations. By far the best-known achievements in the chapel are the work of Michelangelo. Across the ceiling he painted nine episodes from Genesis. frescoes. Visitors might have trouble finding the Guggenheim Las Vegas, though: Gallery-goers must walk through the Venetian's lobby and past the casino, perhaps dropping a few coins along the way. When they finally arrive, there's a fair chance they'll mistake the museum for the nearby Harley-Davidson Cafe, at least at the beginning. The inaugural exhibition is the infamous "Art of the Motorcycle"--in a proper setting at last. |
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