Thursday, 16 February 2023

THOUGHTS ON SYDNEY MODERN


After reading a few articles on the new ‘Sydney Modern’, the extension to the Art Gallery of New South Wales that is yet to be named, a few things come to mind. The media reports show one typically reproduced exterior image and many more photographs of the artwork on display in its spacey, interlaced interior context - a collection of the more ‘akimbo-interesting’ shots*: see - https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2019/11/architectural-seeing.html 


Sydney Modern.


Sydney Modern interiors.



Tate Modern.

In these media reports, the politicians rave on about how the ‘$344 million building’ will bring in billions of dollars to the New South Wales economy. The circumstance of having a ‘star’ gallery attraction for Sydney is likened to New York having the Guggenheim, and London its Tate Modern. Even some interior spaces are said to have parallels to these dazzling gems, like the Tank Room of Sydney Modern that is likened to the Turbine Hall of Tate Modern. While each of these locations might be industrial spaces built in concrete, shaping areas that once had vastly different prior uses, there is an apparent, significant difference here, just as there is in the whole scheme of things. The Tate Modern space is the core of the gallery, not an underground aside accessed by a miniature Guggenheim spiral ramp that looks more like a child’s roller toy than a meaningful detour.


The Turbine Hall, Tate Modern.,


The Tank Room, Sydney Modern.

The ramp into the Tank Room, Sydney Modern.

The New York Guggenhein's ramped interior.


There is always a danger in speaking critically about an ‘unseen’ project from the other side of the world, (in this case the remote Shetland islands), but one cannot deny the relevance of such a ‘blind’ approach to understanding in a culture where so much is gleaned from digital reproduction through the Internet. Most of our initial experiences of places come from our digital media; and we all know the power of first impressions.


Tate Modern.

New York Guggenheim.

Sydney Modern.

While the politicians must be ever-hopeful, having invested $244 million of public money in the project, one can comment that the art gallery is different to the New York Guggenheim and London’s Tate Modern in that it has a shifty, shambles, albeit with a primly precise identity that lacks the core authority of the memorable appearances of the referenced galleries, the intriguing international ‘drawcards’ that attract without any pushy hype or slick branding.


Sydney Opera House.



As for the report that headlines the comment telling the Sydney Opera House to ‘move over,’ one can note that this new amorphous, artfully-glassy, layered whiteness appears to have none of the richly organised complexity that makes the Sydney Opera House truly ‘iconic.’ It is this raw, coherent recognisability, this complex integrity, that seems to be lacking in the fragility of Sydney Modern.






One could perhaps gauge this quality of recognisability by assessing the graphics that have been developed for buildings. Here the Sydney Opera House is outstanding with its remarkable image, leaving the New York Guggenheim and the London Tate Modern looking a little lesser; but not far behind. Who cannot immediately recognise Wright’s spiral space, or place the massive bulk of the transformed industrial block with its new addition? What will be the memorable graphic of Sydney Modern? Sadly the gallery does not yet even have a name to promote for its opening; it is not a good start.






A Bilbao Guggenheim.

It is surprising that no one has mentioned Gehry’s Bilbao Guggenheim as defining the parallel ambition for this place, as this gallery has become the classic reference for transformative, tourist-generating developments. While one has to be worried about such intentions driving architectural ideas with ambitions for carefully contrived, bespoke expressions, one has to ask: is the Sydney Modern just too twee in its picky, piecemeal expression to be a ‘Bilbao’? Is it too frail and fractured, too intensely intellectual to be ‘iconic’ like the London Tate Modern and the New York Guggenheim that the media has referenced as similar attractions?





Sydney Modern.


How can this new gallery be remembered? How will it be recalled? Does one see it in one’s mind as a collage, a collection of carefully considered pieces; as reconstructed deconstructed parts each being attended to with an intriguing ‘eastern’ sensibility exhibited as a diaphonous perfection shaping the ‘interest'? The architectural firm that designed this building, SANAA, is based in Tokyo.


Sydney Modern.


Perhaps the actual experience of this place will be such that it will become what the politicians wish for, but this is difficult to promote, especially when nameless. The bold sheen of the waving planes of Gehry’s Bilbao Guggenheim captivate and surprise with an integrated buzz. What is referred to a ‘Sydney Modern’ is a building that is spoken about as having been inspired by its surroundings.


What was the inspiration?


While these words struggle to make sense, or to help one read the images, they do suggest a subtle, introvert quietness, an intimate solitude that seems at odds with the exhibitional qualities of ‘identity’ and memorable, public grandeur that ‘advertisement’ buildings possess.


Sydney Modern.




One cannot be left saying nothing about the art that is published in the reports on the opening of this building. One knows that it is a very poor cliche, but one repeatedly does experience that quaint sense of looking at kindergarten displays in a playroom. Art must do more than this; and so too must buildings if they seek to be public statements in public places. Both art and architecture need rigour and commitment. What we see in Sydney Modern is one typical external view of apparently cleverly fuzzed, fused, lapping layers, with snippets of interior shots that seek out the interesting, internal crisscrossing of voids decorated with colourfully different things.



Sydney Modern interors.

Sydney Modern.

One is left with a vague sensing of a building that has been an intimately crafted set of particular, private ideas, rather than one that has been shaped by a bold, extrovert expression of a place promoting a grand vision. We see and can recall bits and pieces, but if asked to say more about this place in the context of the city, one struggles to provide much more than ‘a stepping whiteness with careful glass infills.’ Yet it is this overall contextual presence that one grasps and recalls when one first sees a place; when a place first seizes a person. One looks forward to being there, to experiencing Sydney Modern,* just to have these perceptions tested, challenged. One remains sceptical, because if this identity in its context was really riveting, it would be on display in all of the published images. Sadly, all we see is the same, singular, fuzzy, drone image from a very few different angles and elevations.



Art Gallery of New South Wales.

One is left wondering about what one will see when walking by; when visiting the Art Gallery of New South Wales with its welcoming classic wholeness that one already knows so well. As for Australia seeking any architect but an Australian for such a prestigious project, one can only say: “What’s new?’’ We need to overcome our cultural cringe. While we are talking about giving our aboriginal population ‘a Voice,’ we need to get our own cultural ‘Voice’ sorted out too, instead of relying on imports for a $344 million ‘Wow!’ factor. One has to hope that the ‘Wow!’ is embodied in more than a just an unbelievably large number.#



Sydney Modern.


See articles:

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/dec/03/the-sydney-modern-project-is-finally-open-has-the-art-gallery-of-nsws-344m-expansion-paid-off?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2022/nov/28/move-over-sydney-opera-house-theres-a-new-superstar-in-town?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2022/dec/03/five-great-reads-notes-from-chinas-protests-eviscerating-scott-morrison-and-the-new-sydney-operahouseCMP=Share_AndroidApp_Other


A memorable gallery.


*

The fact that one has not seen the building, yet is critical of it, is always raised by colleagues, and always manages to make its point. Considering the general critiques made of architectural publications with their contrived texts and carefully selected images – see: https://voussoirs.blogspot.com/2023/02/the-ha-ha-haus-place-context.html - one has to concede that the retort has its relevance. However, in this situation where the blurb claims that the project has a presence that exceeds that of the identity of the Sydney Opera House, and has the character of such icons as the New York Guggenheim and London’s Tate Modern, one can comment on these points that all rely on the media to sustain their hype, that same media that has been used to learn about this gallery extension.


Sydney Modern.

#

P.S.

What is it about the number $344 million? Is it one of those quantities that journalists love to use? A quick review of a few articles reveals its popularity - c.f.:

Lottery scams cost Americans, Canadians $344 million in Three Years (www.casino.org)

and

https://twitter.com/bestforbritain/status/1073562108841865217 ($344 million Brexit travel tax)

https://fcpablog.com/2014/04/10/man-ag-discloses-344-million-in-penalties-and-costs-for-brib/

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-lottery-idUSBRE9B50VS20131207 (jackpot climbs to $344 million for next week)

https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/about-us/about-us1/media/press-releases/universal-credit-cut-everything-you-need-to-know/ (universal credit cut from $344 . . . - not million!: ‘Universal Credit’ is the awkwardly named Social Service payment in the UK).



*
19 March 23

To equate the love of art with a love of fine sensations is to make of works of art a kind of aphrodisiac. The words “disinterested aesthetic contemplation” are a contradiction in terms and a pure non-sense.

“A Figure of Speech, or a Figure of Thought?”

Ananda K. Coomaraswamy


13 MAY 2023

Philip Drew's somewhat rambling review on Sydney Modern is published in the self-proclaimed ‘intellectual’ publication, Quadrant:

https://quadrant.org.au/magazine/2023/05/the-worst-new-building-in-sydney/

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