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Solomon Museum: Frank Lloyd Wright

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THE SOLOMON R.

GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT

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Digitized by the Internet Archive
in 2012 with funding from
Metropolitan New York Library Council - METRO

http://archive.org/details/solomonrgOOwrig
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
New York

Frank Lloyd Wright Architect


Quotations from Frank Lloyd Wright
on pages 13 and 22 are by
permission of Horizon Press, New York.

Photographic credits
black and white
Courtesy Horizon Press, New York: Frontispiece
Robert E. Mates, New York: p. 8
Robert E. Mates and Mary Donlon, New York: p. 47
William H. Short: pp. 4, 12

ektachromes
Liberto Perugi, Firenze

10,000 copies of this book, designed by


Liberto Perugi, have been printed
by Officine Grafiche Firenze
in October 1975 for the Trustees of
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.
All rights reserved.
No part of the contents of this book
may be reproduced without
the written permission of the publishers
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation,
New York, 1975.

Printed in Italy
Millions of visitors, young and old, from all parts of the world and from all

walks of life, have been through this building and have experienced its

changing programs since the doors were opened more than fifteen years ago.

Largely forgotten now are the anguished outcries that accompanied the Mu-
seum's first presentation when its novelty and its radical deviation from the
accustomed norm overshadowed the qualities of serenity and harmony for
which the structure is liked and admired today. A threefold accord between
architecture, art and people has, over these years, given distinction to the

great retrospectives that have made telling contributions to public awareness


of modern art. Kandinskv and Klee, Munch and Schiele, Giacometti and
Ernst, Calder and Smith, Dubuffet and Lichtenstein, among many others, have
unfolded down the ramps and into the level spaces of the High Gallery and
the monumental Central Court — always in relation to the architecture's
masses and voids, always peopled and enlivened by throngs of viewers.
The photographs and the descriptive passages in this publication may, we
hope, convey some of the building's attributes to those as yet unfamiliar with
it and serve as a souvenir for those who have visited and enjoyed it.

Incidentally and inevitably, the booklet also celebrates the achievement of


Frank Lloyd Wright, the architect, and the vision of Solomon R. Guggenheim,
the founder.

Peter Lawson-Johnston, President


The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Thomas At. Messer, Director
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
July 1975
The ramp under construction, August 1957.
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

Solomon R. Guggenheim was the fourth of the seven Guggenheim brothers of the
remarkable family which, upon arrival in the United States from Switzerland in
the nineteenth century, had created a financial empire in mining. In the gentle-
manly tradition of empire builders, Solomon R. Guggenheim began to collect

works by Old Masters. But in the mid-twenties, circumstances changed the course
of his collecting. In 1926 he met and commissioned a young German artist.

Baroness Hilla Rebay von Ehrenweisen, to paint his portrait. Attractive, talented
and dynamic, she had exhibited with avant-garde groups in Germany from 191-4

to 1920, particularly the Secession group in Munich (1914-15) and Berlin (1915i.
In 1917 she exhibited at Der Sturm Gallery in Berlin. Here, probably through
Herwarth Walden, she met other artists who exhibited in his gallery: Delaunay.
Gleizes, Leger, Chagall, Kandinsky and Bauer. Her major hero was Kandinsky,
later overshadowed by intense admiration for Rudolf Bauer. As their friendship
developed, she introduced Mr. Guggenheim into this circle. Converted by her
enthusiasm and expertise to champion this avant-garde art, he began to buy, stead-
ily and in increasing quantities, until the walls of his apartment at the Plaza were
crowded. As the fame of the collection grew, Solomon Guggenheim opened his

apartment at intervals to the art world and began to lend to exhibitions. The
inevitable step of converting the collection into a foundation occurred in 19 37 when
the Foundation was incorporated and empowered to operate a museum. When
the new museum opened, with Miss Rebay as Director, as The Solomon R. Guggen-
heim Collection of Non-Objective Paintings, in rented quarters at 24 Mast 54th
Street on June 1, 1939, the public discovered handsome rooms of modern design
and pure screened areas on which silver and gold-framed Kandinskvs, B.iuers and
Delaunays were aesthetically spaced. Exhibitions of American painting followed,
as Hilla Rebay attracted a circle of abstract American artists and student converts
to her increasinglv passionate enthusiasm for « non objective painting
Between 1947 anil 1951, land was secured on Fifth Avenue between eight] eighth
and eighty-ninth streets for the building of the radically new museum structure,

commissioned from Frank Lloyd Wright in 1943. During the interim, in 1948,
the collection moved to a six-story mansion on the site at 1071 Fifth Avenue. Here,
on gray fabric-covered walls, with music by Bach piped into the galleries,

Kandinskys, Bauers and the works of young non-objective artists were shown in

successive exhibitions. Retrospective loan shows were also mounted, the most
important being the Kandinsky Memorial Exhibition of 1945 and the Moholy-Nagy
retrospective in 1947.
In 1948 the collection was enlarged with over seven hundred items by the
purchase in its entirety of the estate of Karl Nierendorf, a well-known New York
dealer in German painting. Into the collection came an historic Kokoschka, eight-
een additional Kandinskys. raising the total to one hundred and eighty, one hundred
and ten Klees, six Chagalls, twenty-four Feiningers, fifty-four Kirchner watercolors
and prints, as well as works by lesser-known Europeans and Americans.
James Johnson Sweeney, internationally known art critic and former Director of
the Department of Painting and Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art, New
York, succeeded Hilla Rebay as Director in 1952 and was encouraged to reorganize
the museum along more professional lines. Draperies were taken down, walls were
painted a pristine white, heavy gold frames were removed in favor of no frames
at all, and the paintings were catalogued and conserved. The name of the museum
was changed from The Museum of Non-Objective Painting to The Solomon R.
Guggenheim Museum.
When in the mid-fifties preparations began for building the long-planned Frank
Lloyd Wright structure, the Museum was housed in temporary quarters at 7 East
12 Street while the Wright building was being constructed.
The opening of the new museum in October 1959 brought the Guggenheim
world-wide recognition for which it was only partly prepared. The transition from
the temporary quarters on East 72 Street with a limited staff into the huge structure
where lines of spectators waited patiently for admission, strained the Museum's
resources in every respect. It became the task of Thomas M. Messer, appointed
Director in 1961, to build a professional staff that would be equal to the increased

public demands and to adjust the exhibition and acquisition programs to an


unprecedented situation.
A major development since The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum moved into the
Wright building is the installation of the Justin K. Thannhauser collection. This
modern art treasure is on permanent display in specially designed quarters on the
second floor. Justin K. Thannhauser has generously designated it as a bequest to
the Guggenheim Museum. Consisting of seventy-five paintings, works on paper
and sculptures, in part antedating the Museum's original collecting scope, it serves
as an historical background for the collection as a whole.
Another important addition to the Museum's collection is the Hilla von Rebay
Collection acquired in 1971 by settlement with her Estate.
Measures have also been taken to bring about the most recent enrichment of the
Museum's holdings through the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice, which,
together with the Palazzo Venier dei Leoni on the Grand Canal, is about to be
transferred to The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation's ownership with the proviso
that it will continue to be administered in Venice in Peggy Guggenheim's name.
The Museum's collection, seen as a whole, still bears the distinct mark of its founder,
Solomon R. Guggenheim, whose original intentions are safeguarded in policies

formulated by succeeding presidents — by Harry F. Guggenheim during the crucial


years from 1957 to 1969, and by Peter O. Lawson-Johnston, the founder's grandson,
at present. Born of the maturing convictions and tastes of a private collector, the

Museum's treasures were increased in the founder's lifetime by his continual con-
tributions, and at his death by the remainder of the collection gathered by him
and by succeeding directors who have acquired through purchase and donations,
a unique assembly of sculpture and painting which todaj is essential for a full

understanding of twentieth-centurv art.

Louise Averill Svendsen


Curator
The museum seen from eighty-ninth street before the annex was constructed.

Til If

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-11
III
The building is cast-in-place concrete, its spiral shape formed by a grand
cantilevered ramp, over one-quarter of a mile long, that curves unbroken
from the ground to the heights of the dome, almost one hundred feet above.

This circular form is repeated in the elevator shaft, the skylight and the
auditorium below the main floor and in decorative motives such as the circles
of the terrazzo floor and the outside pavement, the grills, windows and even
flower beds.
The ground floor provides a multipurpose space useful for the display of
large paintings and sculptures and is ideal for special events. The High
Gallery supplies additional space for sculpture and monumental pictures
and is in marked contrast to the seventy-four niche-like bays that compose
the primary display areas.
Adjacent to the exhibition wing, and linked to it bv the Justin K. Thann-
hauser galleries above and the new bookstore below, is the Administration
building which houses the offices of the museum staff. It is circular in plan,

with a light-well surrounding the utility core which extends from the ground
to a skylight above.

The following photographs were taken in the fall "I 1969, during the i

hit ion Rov Lichtenstein.


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Frank Lloyd Wright on the museum's top ramp during construction.

12
To understand the situation as it exists in the scheme for the Guggenheim
Memorial all you have to do is imagine clean heautiful surfaces throughout
the building, all beautifully proportioned to human
These surfaces
scale.
are all lighted from above ivith any degree of daylight (or from artificial light
the same source) that the curator or the artist himself may happen to desire.
The atmosphere of great harmonious simplicity wherein human proportions
are maintained in relation to the picture is characteristic of your building.
Opportunities for individual taste in presentation are so varied and so advan-
tageous that were J to make a specific model for you you should tell me
in detail how you feel about the picture to be shown... how important you
regard the picture to be shown... how important you regard the picture as
a feature of the exhibition or perhaps the building itself, etc., etc.

I assure you that anything you desired to happen could happen. Background
space could be apportioned and light slanted, strengthened or dimmed to
any desired degree. Frames and glass would only be necessary evils because
But if you liked them for certain designs
of perfect air-conditioning, etc.
which may have been painted with them in mind you could have them, —
as a matter of course.
The basis for all picture-presentation in your memorial-building is to provide
perfect plasticity of presentation. Adaptability and wide range for the indi-
vidual taste of the exhibitor whoever he or she might be is perfectly provided
for and established by the architecture itself.
All this has been so carefully considered in this building that the irhoU
interior would add up which the paintings would
to a reposeful place in
be seen to better advantage then they have ever been seen.

Frank Lloyd Wright


1) Letter to Solomon R. Guggenheim, August 14, 1
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The Guggenheim Museum was conceived to be as adventurous in its

architecture as in its collections. The building is the culmination of


the efforts and vision of two men: Frank Lloyd Wright, the architect,

and Solomon R. Guggenheim, the patron and client. Solomon Guggen-


heim took the bold step of asking Wright to design his museum in 1943,
and it was he who immediately grasped and appreciated the concept
behind the plans as they were initially presented. At the time, it was
not possible to foresee that Guggenheim himself would die before con-
struction even began or that the architect would not survive to see its
official opening. But to this day the spirit of both men persists in the
unique structure.
Fifteen years were consumed in realizing the completion of the build-
ing. The story of these years is complex, but it ultimately conveys the
triumph of an aesthetic idea over circumstantial concerns and limita-

tions.

After a search for an appropriate site — one in which the possibilities

considered ranged from a hilltop in the western Bronx overlooking the


Hudson river, to placement of the museum in Central Park — the block
fronting on Fifth Avenue and the park, between eighty-eighth and eighty-
ninth streets, was decided upon by 1944. The first plans for this location
were submitted within the same year and all subsequent designs are
merely ramifications and modifications of the original presentation. The
final profile of the structure began to (.merge in 1948 and had crystallized
15 by 1949 when the relative positions of the exhibition gallery and admin-
istration wings were exchanged, placing the large mass of the main
spiral on the eighty-eighth street corner.

The war and rising post-war costs prevented immediate construction of


the museum following the preparation of drawings in 1944. Solomon
Guggenheim's death in 1949 caused a further postponement until his
estate was settled, and thus, it was only in 1952 that a building permit
was requested from the City of New York. The conservatism and skep-
ticism of various city building departments forced four more years of
delay until argument and the introduction of numerous changes in the
design and engineering of the structure finally satisfied the officials

involved.
In 1949 Solomon's role as client was assumed by his nephew, Harry
Frank Guggenheim, a powerful and dynamic figure. As Chairman of the
Board and later President of The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation,
his task was to find and maintain a balance among the professional
prerequisites of the museum, financial realities, bureaucratic fiats and
the architect's need for freedom of action, in the hope of producing the
building without harmful compromise. In addition to restrictions im-
posed by the building code, an even more crucial factor increasingly
influenced the final form of the building project. In the years between
1943 and its opening in 1959, only months after Wright's death at the

age of ninety, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum gradually evolved


from a private collection with strong memorial overtones into an active
16 and provocative center of twentieth-century art, which required large
areas for office space, photography studios, conservation workshops
shipping and receiving facilities and storage rooms. Since the day of
its opening, the Museum has continued to expand its range of activities
and exhibitions, constantly demanding more and more from the simple
idea that Frank Lloyd Wright originally had for a pavilion in the park,
a "reposeful place in which paintings could be seen to better advantage
than they have ever been seen."
The reconciliation of an architect's design with a client's needs and
aspirations often becomes a tug-of-war which may, as in the case of the
Guggenheim, result in that major and rarely realized accomplishment
of a significant and innovative structure that fulfills the purpose for
which it was created. The original museum concept underwent many
changes and adaptations but it was never transformed. Wright's state-

ment quoted above underscores this point: in poetic and architectural


terms he describes the building's unique spatial ambience and scale
which remains unaffected by subsequent modifications and he justlv

emphasizes the versatility and adaptability of the building. He presents


a vision of what was, for the time, a bold new idea - pictures without
frames, freed from the constraints of traditional presentation through
the technical marvels of the modern age.

When the building opened to the public it evoked strong criticism,

extending from charges that it resembled nothing so much as an over-


grown oatmeal bowl to assertions thai a great architect had committed
17 the folly of designing an overwhelming monument and memorial to
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himself, rather than an environment in which one could appreciate
works of art. The years, however, have witnessed the growing appre-
ciation of the magnitude of Wright's achievement until, today, the
museum is widely recognized as one of the most satisfactory exhibition
spaces in the world. Regardless of how the original plans have continued
to evolve and despite some admitted operational difficulties, the building
stands as a milestone in museum architecture. Measured and articulated to
present a coherent, well-scaled succession of viewing areas, it responds,
not to the circumstances of any particular vogue or installation scheme,
but rather to an architectural idea of spatial volume, proportion, surface
and movement which is equally valid for works of art of almost any
description.
The vitality of Wright's museum is demonstrated by the fact that it

has been extended and modified and yet has preserved its personality;
it has continued to absorb more and more activity without its essential

character being diluted.


According to the original concept, the building was to house a perma-
nent display of Solomon Guggenheim's collection, and Wright intended
to fix these pictures flat against the outwardly angled walls. Today,
works are hung vertically and appear to float free of the wall behind
them, with the selection on display changing with the five to twelve

exhibitions held each year. The library, originally located on the bridge
over the driveway, has given way to the exhibition galleries created

20 for the important Justin K. Thannhauser Bequest; it was, in turn, rehous-


ed, in the southeastern extension on the ground floor where the cafe-

teria once stood. In 1968, William Wesley Peters, who succeeded to


Wright's practice, completed an annex to house the conservation labo-
ratory and the permanent collection storage vault, and the spaces for-
merly preempted for these activities on the top ramp of the gallery spiral

have as a result become useable for exhibition purposes. In 1974 the


driveway under the building, by then obsolete and dark, was partially

enclosed and a new restaurant and bookstore created to serve the public,
with the help of funds from the Harrv F. Guggenheim Foundation. The
auditorium beneath the main gallery floor was designed for lectures and
concerts but has increasingly been used with notable success for dance
programs and elaborate theatrical performances.

Throughout the years Wright's initial architectural idea has been proven
valid again and again. The surfaces are pure, the light abundant, and
the scale particularly human. Pictures and sculpture are presented in
varying arrangements, each work commanding its own space, yet each

existing in harmony within a unified exhibition. Seen from the many


different vistas across the great void of the interior, or weighed from
one ramp to another, the impact and interrelationship of the objects
on display are always evident. This experience greatly adds to tin-

appreciation of individual works. Moreover, the continuity oi the gal-


lery sequence establishes a progression of works which not only clarifies
the development of inherent aesthetic ideas but also removes the prin-

2i cipal cause of museum fatigue — visitor contusion as to where to turn


next. As one walks down the ramp, each work of art is presented in
the neutral space created by the simple painted concrete surfaces of the
building's interior. Each work inhabits its own discrete space and makes
an unqualified claim on our attention. Passing from one bay to the next,
or turning around, the visitor is taken away from the object and oriented
in the wider context of the whole museum with views of other visitors
and works of art interacting in the distance; the result is an orchestra-
tion of periods of intense aesthetic involvement and more distanced
reflection and evaluation.

Henry Berg
Deputy Director

Architecture, may it please the court, is the welding of


imagination and common sense into a restraint upon spe-
cialists, codes and fools. Also, it is an enlargement of their
imaginations. Architecture therefore should make it easier

to conceive the infinite variety of specific instances which


lie unrealized by man in the heart of Nature.

22 Frank Lloyd Wright, February 14, 1953


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