Situated between the High Line and the Hudson River in
Manhattan’s Meatpacking District, the new building will vastly increase the
Whitney’s exhibition and programming space, offering the most expansive display
ever of its unsurpassed collection of modern and contemporary American
art. The building opens to the public on May 1, 2015.
The Building
Designed by architect Renzo Piano, the new building will
include approximately 50,000 square feet of indoor galleries and 13,000 square
feet of outdoor exhibition space and terraces facing the High Line. An
expansive gallery for special exhibitions will be approximately 18,000 square
feet in area, making it the largest column-free museum gallery in New York
City. Additional exhibition space includes a lobby gallery (accessible free of
charge), two floors for the permanent collection, and a special exhibitions
gallery on the top floor.
According to Mr. Piano, “The design for the new museum
emerges equally from a close study of the Whitney’s needs and from a response
to this remarkable site. We wanted to draw on its vitality and at the same time
enhance its rich character. The first big gesture, then, is the cantilevered
entrance, which transforms the area outside the building into a large,
sheltered public space. At this gathering place beneath the High Line, visitors
will see through the building entrance and the large windows on the west side
to the Hudson River beyond. Here, all at once, you have the water, the park,
the powerful industrial structures and the exciting mix of people, brought
together and focused by this new building and the experience of art.”
The dramatically cantilevered entrance along Gansevoort
Street will shelter an 8,500-square-foot outdoor plaza or “largo,” a public
gathering space steps away from the southern entrance to the High
Line. The building also will include an education center offering
state-of-the-art classrooms; a multi-use black box theater for film, video, and
performance with an adjacent outdoor gallery; a 170-seat theater with stunning
views of the Hudson River; and a Works on Paper Study Center, Conservation Lab,
and Library Reading Room. The classrooms, theater, and study center are all
firsts for the Whitney.
A retail shop on the ground-floor level will contribute to
the busy street life of the area. A ground-floor restaurant and top-floor cafe
will be conceived and operated by renowned restaurateur Danny Meyer and his
Union Square Hospitality Group, which operated +Untitled+, the restaurant in
the Whitney's Marcel Breuer building on the Upper East Side, until programming
there concluded on October 19.
Mr. Piano’s design takes a strong and strikingly
asymmetrical form—one that responds to the industrial character of the
neighboring loft buildings and overhead railway while asserting a contemporary,
sculptural presence. The upper stories of the building overlook the Hudson
River on its west, and step back gracefully from the elevated High Line Park to
its east.
After the opening of the new Whitney this spring,
the Metropolitan Museum of Art plans to present
exhibitions and educational programming at the Whitney’s uptown building for a
period of eight years, with the possibility of extending the agreement for a
longer term.
http://whitney.org/About/NewBuilding
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario