Features

 

Club Member Special
The Art of the Motorcycle
Guggenheim Las Vegas
Exhibition design: Frank Gehry
Museum design: Rem Koolhaas
 

 

"A spectacular phantasmagoria of stainless steel plates, translucent glass, steel mesh and strobe lights, it encapsulates all you need to know about a motorcycle's modern meaning. Gehry uses his machine materials to fracture, reflect and diffuse light, creating sexy, highly organic, frankly theatrical forms, from billowing clouds and monumental floral blossoms to great curtain swags. Glamour and erotic thrill summarize the motorcycle aesthetic."
Christopher Knight
Art Critic, Los Angeles Times


Photo: arcspace

"The Art of the Motorcycle", a new installation designed by Frank Gehry, explores the motorcycle as both cultural icon and design achievement. Gehry also designed the installation of "The Art of the Motorcycle" when it was on view at the Guggenheim museums in New York and Bilbao.

Gehry’s building-within-a-building features enormous curved polished stainless steel architectural structures, towering chain link curtains, glass floors and partitions, large scale graphics, and a massive glass box coated with an iridescent film. At certain angles this box appears opaque, with moving images of motorcycles projected onto the surface, and from other vantage points the box is clear, revealing the motorcycles within. With more than 120 motorcycles on display, the exhibition chronicles the most compelling moments in motorcycle design and technology; exploring the motorcycle as a quintessential symbol of modern age. The hundred or so examples in the show range across more than a century and include the most innovative and beautiful, mint-condition vehicles imaginable. The 60 feet high and 120 feet wide Guggenheim Media Wall is divided into segments each displaying different manifestations of the motorcycle as seen in moving images.


Photo: arcspace
The Exhibition model at the FOGA office


Photo: arcspace

You see yourself and the motorcycles distorted in the curved reflective panels and you get to walk around, inside and under the enveloping curves. The effect, as intended, is showy, sexy, dynamic, dreamy, funny.

This first large scale exhibition in the “Big Box”; the 63,700 square foot exhibition hall of the Guggenheim Las Vegas, inaugurated in October 2001, demonstrates the capacity and versatility of the new seven story tall museum space.
The Guggenheim Las Vegas was conceived as an exhibition hall for the presentation of special projects, ranging from contemporary paintings and sculpture, to architecture and design, and multimedia art.

“Rem Koolhaas brings an industrial aesthetic, an impeccable precision, and a powerful sense of space and humor to all aspects of the design. The result is not only an absolutely unique space, but also a breathtakingly beautiful one.”
Thomas Krens
Director, Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation

Major feature about the Rem Koolhaas designed Guggenheim Museums in Las Vegas coming soon...

March 4, 2002