Four critics weigh in on the new Seattle Art Museum

Update: Two in the Los Angeles Times mention the forbidden topic – the adjoining, earlier SAM building designed by Robert Venturi – and two others, in The Seattle Times, foresee problems with solar screens to diffuse sunlight.

The Los Angeles Times dispatched two critics to appraise the new Seattle Art Museum, opening to the public this weekend, and each gives generally positive reviews of the architecture and the art, making some fine-grained observations. The first comes from Christopher Knight, who finds the new museum to be "nicely proportioned" and a relief after the "horrible" 1991 SAM building it adjoins. Knight finds several works of art to his liking, particularly the witty portrait by John Singleton Copley, one of the main new acquisitions. He explains that SAM is far from a traditional museum, with a European center of gravity, but finds real treasures in the new American art and its skillful display (always a strength at SAM). Turning to the Sculpture Park, which awaits more sculpture and more mature plantings, he says, he calls "Eagle" the "best-sited Calder" he's ever seen. The second assessment is by Christopher Hawthorne, and it contains a more-detailed, if rather cool, description of the new SAM's architecture by the Portland architect Brad Cloepfil. Hawthorne starts by dispensing with the party line that the new SAM is all about showing off art, not the architect, finding "plenty of ego" in the architecture, if "coolly restrained." He compares the new SAM with an obvious model, the new Museum of Modern Art in New York, noting how "upright and largely corporate" both feel. This critic thinks SAM relates more to the Washington Mutual bank tower than to the Venturi wing. While admiring the "well-balanced geometry" of SAM's exhibit spaces, and fully aware of how dated the stage-set post modernism of Venturi has become, Hawthorne ends by missing the sense of humor and feeling for decoration that Venturi put forth. Update: Vancouver critic Trevor Boddy weighs in with a fairly harsh appraisal of Cloepfil's new SAM in The Seattle Times, finding the large public spaces "hospital-like," more of "a hulking leftover" than a space with compelling details or texture. Boddy likes "the beguilingly simple and effective rooms for showing art" and the seamless connections with the Venturi wing. He notes that the steel shutters that most expected to be automated solar screens to diffuse sunlight as the day changed "actually need to be manually moved, one-by-one, by staff wearing safety harnesses on narrow ledges above the street." A companion review by Sheila Farr tours the collections with acute observations. Farr also has problems with the windows and all the fussy devices to shield viewers from too much direct sunlight.

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David Brewster is Editor-in-Chief at Crosscut, and chair of the board of Crosscut Public Media. You can e-mail him at david.brewster@crosscut.com.

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Comments:

Posted Wed, May 2, 4:53 p.m. Inappropriate

the problem with light: The many screens are there not to sheild viewers from too much light, but to sheild the art. Photographs and other works on paper are particularly susceptible to damage from sunlight. So the perpetual tradeoffs are between a desire for natural light and views and the conservation of the collections the building is to display.

Eric F

Posted Wed, May 2, 5:34 p.m. Inappropriate

SAM Quick Take: Only had time for a quick one-hour lunch breeze-through in the new museum but was quite pleased. The space FELT really good. The art was well-lit with the textiles looking especially glorious. Especially liked coming up the escalator to the display of African dress--it seemed playful and expressive. And because it was so close it welcomed the visitor in as a participant. Also liked having video shown on floors, ceilings, walls--altered one's perspective a bit. Must say I'm dying to put my cat on the floor video display, just to see how he'd react to the moving images under his feet...

Posted Sun, May 6, 11:51 a.m. Inappropriate

SAM not SAAM: The space IS corporate, as if a real estate agent planned it to be turned into an office building if the SAM start up ails.

Is that bad? Not for me. I like museums to NOT intrude. One reason I dislike IM Pei's Louvre and his National Gallery, is that architecture itself intrudes. Venturi's building, thankfully now turned into no more than a museum entrance, was even worse. Pei's architecture is wonderful, Venturi's is trite but still intrusive.

As for the Art, SAM still seems to me to be too much of is an expression of Seattle's nouveau grande-riche collectors rather than an effort to celebrate art. A large part of the collections one first sees on entry is generic art, a tribute to someone who can afford to visit Castelli and buy leftovers AFTER one of Castelli's clients has "made it."

But I am not utterly upset because there are wonderful connections here. I cried at some of the Tobeys and had a sad desire to want these as my own. Wonderful Mungo Martin Ravens, a Seaweed Hamatsa, Pollocks and Rothkos, and, yes, the Copley (though there are three, two of which would be better unseen).

The spaces have another property that makes discovering these works an adventure. The place is laid out in a maze. It is easy to get lost and I love that.

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